Duvidlsoii ColIooTe
Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive
in 2010 witii funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/quipscranks1958davi
Da\ id S. Bradford, Editor -t C\ r O
Pete Sterling, Busim'ss Mauufjcr 1. y --J y~y
The Sine teen Humtieil .nul I if I) -ei^uhl F.di- OUtll 111/0111011
t/OH of the Annuiil Publication by the
Student Body of Davidson College
Davidson, Sorth Carolina
m
Foreword
In atlemptinR to portray student life on a colleKC campus an
annual editor often finds himself plagued from the bcKinning
by lack of a suitable theme or framework on which to hann the
vast array of facts and events. Fortunately such a situation was
not confronted here at Davidson. Events themselves offered a
unique theme. Indeed, if one were to title the school year of
'57-*r)8. necessity would force him to pick the word. "Transition."
Yet the use of such a broad term merits further explanation.
Undoubtedly, the most significant change of the year was
the resignation of Dr. CunninRham. This loss, coupled with the
departure of Dr. Spencer, marked a series of fundamental changes
in the administration. Yet w ho would be the new president became
the vital issue of the day, for the leader selected would logically
determine the future course of education at Davidson (somewhat
nebulously defined in the past).
Manifold improvements were evident everywhere. The accept-
ance of a Ten Year Plan, w hich resulted in an expanding endow-
ment, quickly displayed itself in the sudden emergence of new-
buildings. With the completion of a group of faculty homes, work
began on a much needed library addition as well as a new Post
Office. A one-half million dollar Fraternity Court, which would
be completed in August, became the envy of all seniors. Plans
for an addition to the Science Building and construction of a
Fine Arts Building rounded out the ever expanding list.
Internal changes were also evident. With the controversial
decision of the Trustees to expand quickly to 1,000, classes bulged
and Chambers moaned as inadequate facilities sought to supply
the over-enlarged student body. Yet in spite of the increased
enrollment, the curriculum underwent a thorough examination.
The result was an expanded Honors program and a more up-to-
date requirement for an A.B. degree.
Student ideas themselves added to the enlightened .scene.
Realistic and practical solutions to honor violations as well as
the drinking problem were sought and often found.
On and on the list might go; yet assuredly one fact has stood
out — that this was a year of transition and a time of awakening.
A newness had flowered in these brief moments that might be
comparable to the dawning of an infinite day at Davidson
Davidson
Truly Davidson has embarked on a new era. The changes that have been
so evident this past year have placed her in a decisive position; for having
now been thrown on a full sea, she must decide which current to take.
This choice alone will determine the excellence of her venture.
ner ^pirlt^ iP/indy and (l3odi
^
With these facts in mind, we shall begin our own journey, seeking
to portray Davidson in the most realistic framework possible (pictures as
well as narration). Our primary hope is that you, too, will find some sig-
nificance in these years that have been so vital to us.
Our story begins ....
.^
:«!j*i.r«aer^
her SPIRIT . . .
MIND . . .
. . . and BODY
The Maxwell B. Chambers Building
The David Ovens College Union
Eumanean Literary Society
\V. H. Bdk Hall
The QUIPS and CRANKS of 1958
is dedicated to
Dr. W. O. Puckett
It is indeed a privilege to dedicate the 1958 Quips and Cranks to Dr.
Puckett. The honor that we can bestow upon him seems insignificant
compared to those he has sown and reaped for this institution.
Coming from the neighboring town of Cornelius, Dr. Puckett entered
the hallowed walls of Davidson in the fall of '29. After graduation and
a brief period of teaching at this college, he departed for Chapel Hill where
he was quickly awarded his M.A. Yet wishing more in education, he moved
on to the very heart of the Ivy League itself, Princeton. With the accu-
mulation of a Ph.D. and seventeen years of teaching experience at the
"Tiger School," Dr. Puckett had gained notable recognition among higher
educational institutions.
Davidson was indeed fortunate in 1946 when "her wandering son" de-
cided to come back home. Quickly making the much needed changes in the
Biology Department, Dr. Puckett established Davidson as "the' pre-med
school of the South ; and as a result of his relentless work, the finer medical
schools of the country cast longing eyes toward the Davidson graduate.
Thus the choice of Dr. Puckett is inevitable. His keen mind, warm per-
sonality, and spiritual awareness have symbolized and perpetuated those
very traits for which Davidson herself continues to strive.
"A)nJ (/ladlji iroUh- he lernr
And filaclbi fccfie."
it
The
Administration
r iii-iiir II III
Li'iriini niiiiitmii
I'lisf Otfici cIkdiiii Fnitiiiiitii ('nint di iih>i>iiii nt
New Scenes on Campus
Board of Trustees
OFFICERS
Rev.
J.
McDowell Richards. D.D.,
LL.D. /•»■»■;
sidriil
Dr.
Thomas D. Sparrow
Vice-President
FRA!
MK
P. Hall
Srcretaiji
D. Grier Martin
Tieamtref
.1. P. Booth
R. K. Gregory
Walter L. Lingle. Jr.
Rev. Roscoe L. Prince
William C. Cannon
R. D. Grier
J. Spencer Love
Rev. John A. Redhead
Rev. J. H. Carter
Rev. Warner L. Hall
Dr. Frank McCutchan
Rev. Kelsey Regen
Scott Chandler
Rev. T. H. Hamilton
Dr. Hamilton W. McKay
Roderick K. Shaw
Jerome B. Clark, Jr.
James C. Harper
E. T. McKeithen
John L Smith
Colonel J. C. Cooper
Dr. James P. Hendrix
J. Harold McKeithen
Rev. Fred R. Stair. Jr.
Georce S. Crouch
Ralph M. Holt
Rev. a. a. McLean
C. L. Stanford
Rev. C. Grier Davis
Joseph L. Hunter
Rev. M. C. MacQueen
IvEY W. Stewart
Rev. J. Wayte Fulton
Rev. James A. Jones
Harvey W. Moore
Rev. W. T. Thompson
Rev. Alton H. Glasure
R. S. Kelly
W. Olin Nisbet. Jr.
Harold B. Wahl
Thomas E. Gray
George M. King
Rev. p. D. Patrick
Rev. Ronald S. Wiuson
Robert \V. Gorrell
Rev. .\lbert J. Kissi.ing
D. R. LaFar, Jr.
Rev. T. H. Patterson
Cloyd a. Potts
Rev. D. C. Young
Dr. Clarence J. PieTENPCL. actiun President (seated)
Dr. John C. Bailey, acting Dean
Page nileen
^
' "^ ^"\ #*N r^ c\ o
V^ A Bill;
PiETENPOL Bailey Hengeveld Martin Payne McGill Sailstad
CURRIE HOBAIiT MOORE NEALE POTEAT SCOTT SMITH
Stacks Staples Thies White Woods
Administration
Clarence John Pietenpol, B.S. (Pittsburgh), M.S.
(Colorado), Ph.D. (New York), Professor of Physics
and Dean of the Fiicnliy.
John Crooks Bailey, Jr., A.B. (Davidson), M.A. (Johns
Hopkins), Professor of Greek (iiid Bible; Dean of Stu-
dents.
Frederick William Hengeveld, B.S. (Davidson), Direc-
tor of Admissions and Registrar.
David Grier Martin, B.S. (Davidson), Treasurer and
Business Manager.
John Lewis Payne, B.S. (Davidson), Director of Alumni
and Public Relations.
Myron Wallace McGill, B.S. (Davidson), Bursar and
Assistiint Treasurer.
Robert Sailstad, B.S., M.A. (Minnesota), .Assistant to the
President in Cotlctje Development.
Robert Arrowood Currie, B.S. (Davidson), Assi.^tant to
the Business Manager.
Frank Donald Hobart, Superintendent of Buildings and
Grounds.
Mrs. J. B. Moore, A.B. (Baker University), Supcrvi.tor
of Dormitories.
James Archer Neal, B.S. (Davidson), .Assi.itant to the
Treasurer.
William Ralph Poteat, Director of Food Service for
the College Union.
Tom Scott, B.S. (Kansas State Teachers College), M.A.
(Iowa), Ed.D. (Columbia), Professor of Physical Edu-
cation and Director of Athletics and Physical Education.
Colin Shaw Smith, A.B. (Davidson), M.A. (North Caro-
lina), Director of the College Union and Coordinator of
Studeyit Activities.
Clyde Wilson Stacks, Manager of the College Laundry.
George Staples. A.B. (Pre.sbyterian), B.D., Th.M., Th.D.
(Union Theologrical Seminary), M.A. (Columbia) , .l/i'in's-
/(')• to Stude^its.
Oscar Julius Times, B.S. (Davidson), M.A. (Cornell),
Associate Professor of Chemistry and College Engineer.
Henry Edmunds White, B.S. (Davidson), M.Ed. (South
Carolina), Assistant Dean of Students.
Tames Baker Woods, Jr., A.B. (Davidson), M.D. (Medical
CoUcRO of Vii'^inia), College Physician.
Page Sixteen
Fa cult
y
(iKOmiK l.AWKKNTK AllKKNKTII KV. A.H. ( Ituikllrll I , M.A.
(OlifililU, I'li.n. (Mirliit'iinl, l'iiihnn,ir „l I'hiloHoiihu.
Wii.i.iAM I.. Adams, Jii., H.S. (Centeiini-y), M.S. (Louisiana
.^^tuti'l, I'loirxHKi III Militoiji Sriiiiri- iiiid Ttiftirs.
Kknk.-!T .ALBKKT Hkaty, .A.H. (Davidson), M.A. (South Caio-
liiiu), M..-V. (Coliiiiibial , U.l). (CoUinihiu Theoluifii'al Scrni-
naryt, I'luftssui »/ l.alin aiul dtimiiii.
Ku llAUD K\KK.soN Hkk.vaki), H.S., M..-\., I'h.l). (Virniiiia)
Antiociiitf I'lofiHHDr of Miitlirinalirn.
John MoHCAN Hkva.n, AM. (Franklin and Marshall), IM*.
M..\., I'h.I). (Duke), Assoriitti' I'lofrssor of I'sychotuyii.
Tni>MA.>< Bkdoks, Jr.. B.S., (Georgia Tech), Assixlnnt I'm-
ffgsor of Militiiiy Sciiiifi- iiiitl Tiicticx.
Klmkr Kva.n.s BkoWn, am. (Davidson), .M.A., I'h.I). (Cur
nell), I'rofisnor of Hiologi/.
HoUAiE Aldk.n Bhvan, .\.B. (King Collene), I'h.l). (Tennes-
see), .Anxintinit I'rofissor of Chemixliy.
JAMKS YoLNC Causey. .•^.B. (Virginia), M.A. (North Caro-
lina), Ph.D. (Wisconsin), I'rufessor of Spanish.
Georce Willia.m Crawford, B.S. (Davidson), M.S. (Miihi
gan), AsKistunt Professor of I'lit/sics.
William Hammon Cllp, M.A. (North Carolina), M.H..\.
(Michigan), Professor of Business Adniiiiistrdtion.
William Patterson Gumming, A.B., (Davidson), M..\.,
Ph.D. (Princeton), Professor of English.
Tom DaggY, A.B. (Earlham), M.S., Ph.D. (Northwestern),
Professor of Biology.
Chal.mers Gaston Davidson, A.B. (Davidson), M.A. in L.S.
(Chicago). M..A.. Ph.D. (Harvard), Professor of History
and Director of the Library.
.Joseph Turpin Drake, B.S. (Davidson), M.A., Ph.D. (North
Carolina), Professor of Sociology.
John Borden Evans. A.B. (Davidson), B.D. (Union Theo-
logical Seminary), Assistant Professor of fiible.
•Jl'LiAN Brooklinc Ficklen, B.A. (Washington and I.ee),
M..A. (Virginia), Instructor in English.
Ja.mes Monroe Fredericksen. B.S. (Richmond), Ph.D. (Vir-
ginia), .Associate Professor of Chemistry.
Howard Preston French, Jr., A.B. (Swarthmore), M.A.,
Ph.D. (Indiana), Associate Professor of German.
IlKNRY K.MMETT FULCHER, B.S., M.S. (Virginia), .James P.ii-
ehinian Duke Professor of Physics and Astronomy.
Philip Gehring, A.B., B.M. (Oberlin), M.M. (Syracuse),
.Assistant Professor of Music.
Page Seventeen
^ y
GOLDIERE GCODYKOONTZ
KiMBROUGH LAB3AN
McGavock JIcGeachy
GRIP'FIN
HllUCHENS
IIuk:-ak;-: ;
Jackson Johnston
Lilly
Lloyd
Logan
JIcBrayer McCutchan
McInvaill
McKay
IMcLane
Maloney Marrotte
Faculty
AUGUSTIN Victor Goldiere, A.B. (Dartmouth), M.A., Ph.D.
(Yale), Professor of French.
William Francis Goodykoontz, A.B., LL.B. (Geoige Wash-
ington), M.A., Ph.D. (North Carolina), Assistant Profes-
sor of English.
Arthur Gwynn Griffin, A.B., M.A. (North Carolina),
C.L.U., Professor of Economics and Business Adini)iistra-
tion.
Douglas Clay Houchens, B.F.A., M.F.A. (Richmond Pro-
fessional Institute), Assistant Professor of Fine Arts.
John Washington Huffaker, Jr., B.S. (Davidson), rn.<itri(c-
tor in Chemistry.
Robert Bruce Jackson, Jr., B.S. (Davidson), Ph.D. (Duke),
Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
Frontis Withers Johnston, A.B. (Davidson), Ph.D. (Yale),
Professor of History.
John Thomas Kimbrough, B.S. (Davidson), M.S. (Chicago),
Professor of .Mathematics.
George LabbAN, Jr., A.B., M.A., Ph.D. (Texas), Associate
Professor of Greek.
Henry Tracy Lilly, A.B. (Davidson), M.A. (Princeton),
Litt. D. (Presbyterian), Professor of English.
Charles Edward Lloyd, A.B. (North Carolina), [nstntctor
in English.
Thomas Swindall Logan, B.S., M.S. (Emory), Ph.D. (Johns
Hopkins), Professor of Chnnistry.
Caroline MacBrayer, A.B. (Hollins), M.A., Ph.D. (North
Carolina), Visiting Associate Professor of Psychology.
John Wilson McCutchan, A.B. (Davidson), M.A., Ph.D.
(Virginia). Professor of English.
William Gillespie McGavock, A.B. (Davidson), M.A., Ph.D.
(Duke), Professoi- of Mathematics.
John Alexander McGeachy, Jr., A.B. (Davidson), M.A.
(North Carolina), Ph.D. (Chicago), Professor of History.
Richard Harry McInvaill, Jr., B.A., M.Ed. (South Caro-
lina), Visiting Instructor of Geography.
WOODROW McKay, Jr., B.S. (Davidson), B.D. (Union Theo-
logical Seminary), Visiting Instructor of Bible.
BROOKS McLane, Jr., B.S. (Austin), M.S. (Texas School of
Arts and Industries), Assistant Professor of Physics.
Samuel Dow Maloney, A.B. (Davidson), B.D., Th.M. (Union
Theological Seminary), Assistant Professor of Bible.
Paul Arthur Marrotte, B.A. (New Hampshire), M.A.,
Ph.D. (North Carolina), Assistant Professor of History.
Well, Pedro. I Iiad a friend in
Egypt leho ....
Aiv, you don't say?
J-
After this ridicidous bill, the lousy
t)iachirie better irorkU
.Mkha.s
r'oi.i.K'i
Thompson,
K MKKI/K MlNlKI! MlTCMKI.I. OS I W, M.I
I'rCKKTT IHllHEl.L RAII.II-I IJCBINSON
I! Thompson. .1. Thompson, W. Tkakas Tyso.n Watts
Sattkkkieui
West
sciienck
Workman
. . . 1958
Wil.l.iAM Nelson Mebane, .Ik., B.S (Davidson), M..A. (Cor-
nell), I'lo/esmii- of MathcDtaticii.
(iROVEH Cleveland Meetze, Jr.. B.S. (Dav!dson), Inxtiiicior
ill I'hjisics.
WiNEi ED MiNTER, B.S. (Virginia Polytechnic Institute), M.S.,
Ph.D. (Chicagro), Asuocidtc I'lofessor of Pnlitical Science.
John Mitchell, B.A. (The Citadel), Asxistaiit I'rofessor of
Military Science and Tactics.
Jay Harold Ostwalt, A.B. (Davidson), M..\.. PhT). (Dukei,
Ansoriale I'rofesxor of Edncatimi.
Krnest Finney Patterson. B.S. (Southwest Te.xas Teachers
Colletre), M..A., Ph.D. (Texas), AsKociatr riofessor of Eco-
nomics.
Donald BrYCE PloTT, B.M., M.M. (Michigan), .Associate I'lo-
fessoi- of .\fitsic and Pirecfor of Music.
Max FUicene Polley, .\.B. (Albion College), B.I). (Duke),
.■issistant I'lofessoi- of Ilible.
William Olin Puckett, .-^.B. (Davidson), M..A. (North
Carolina), Ph.D. (Princeton), /t". ./. liii/nolds rrofrssor of
llioloyy.
James Slicek Pikcell, Jr.. A.B. (Stetson), M.A., Ph.D.
(Duke I, I'lofessor of Knylisli.
Charles Kdwaisd Ratliff, Jr., B.S. (Davidson), .V.M.. Ph.D.
(Duke), Associate Professor of Economics.
Walter Lan<;uii)(;e Robinson. B.A., M.A. (Texas) , /Ix«i»^mi'
I'rofi-ssor of del mint.
John Roberts Satterfield. A.B., M..A., .M.M. (North Caro-
lina), .Assistant Professor of Music.
Lewis Bevens Schenck, A.B. (Davidson), B.D. (Union)
Theolog-ical Seminary), S.T.M. (Princeton Seminary),
Ph.D. (Yale), ./. II'. Cannon Professor of Bible.
Bradley DeForrest Thompson, A.B., M.A. (Williams), M.A.
(Harvard), Professor of History.
.John Wesley ThOMPSO.n, Assistant Professor of Military
Science and Tactics.
Walter Thompson, A.B. (Ohio), M.B.A. (Harvard), Asso-
ciate Professor of Economics and Business Administration.
Pedro Nicholas Trakas, A.B. (Wofford), M.A. (University
Nacional de Mexico), Ph.D. (North Carolina), Associate
Piofessor of Spanish.
Raymond Warren Tyson, B.S. (Juniata), M.A. (Western
Reserve), .Associate Professor of Speech.
Ceorce Byron Watts, A.B. (Dartmouth), A.M. (Harvard),
Ph.D. (Minnesota), Professor of French.
Franklin West, A.B. (North Carolina), M.M. (Indiana),
\'isiliiiy .Assistant Professor of .Music.
William Gatevvood Workman, B.Ph., M.A., B.D. (Emory),
Ph.D. (Chicago), Professor of Psychology.
When I wan Editor
DAVinsnxiAX
>f the
lUillet
S'dir Frtiid itas pnniarHii cf»i-
ccrucd irith ....
'Xet Learning be Cherished
Where Liberty has Arisen."
-The Davidson College Seal
V''- f
ORIESTATIOX, lauded as an cnUglittniny LA-ptrii iia, pruvcd otherwise.
GRUESOME REALITY dawned . . . when
the Orientation tests were given.
In a year of innovations, Davidson College tena-
ciously clung to many of the same weathered faces
and conservative institutions which yet remained
impervious to the flow of liberalism. The foremost
of these traditional elements was the gullible fresh-
man who slyly tucked his high school annual under
his arm and followed his parents to the registra-
tion table on the first day of Orientation.
The proud alumnus beamed as his heir carefully
chose his hand-blocked beanie. Little did that innocent
one realize that in the weeks ahead this bit of red and
black was to become his passport to campus distinction
— the benign symbol of the bootblack and stud-runner.
Proudly he slipped the red badge of courage onto that
wee head so filled with the dreams of naivete. This
was it — he was "the College Man."
The Orientation labyrinth, .so lauded in the college
propaganda sheets as an enlightening experience,
proved decisively otherwise. Long-suffering upperclass-
men acted as counsellors to their bewildered charges,
and they privately jotted down many pre-Rush Week
notes. The chapel .seats were uncomfortable ; the audi-
torium was stuffy ; there were no girls ; the reception
line was endless and — "Say! Was that really a girl?
You don't mean to tell me she is only 14? Wow! What
a girl! What a body!" The freshmen adjusted to the
norm rather quickly.
Gruesome reality dawned upon many an ex-valedic-
torian when the Orientation tests were given. "The
College Man" was, after all, only three months removed
from high school days and their easy glory. He began
to feel homesick.
. . . MASS HYSTKRIA.
torn tiiifii riiailx, chcircd
prucils . . .
STrDKSTS AM) FACri/rV ohsrrvtd
tluir croicdt'd chissi-donis icitli disnuiii.
With awe he watched the upperclassmen rirajj
hack from their summer experiences. He eaves-
(li-()l)pe(l on tales from Myrtle Beach ail the way
1o Walla Walla. A lot had hapi)oiied. The only place
it apparently did nut happen was at Fort BragR.
He made a mental note not to take advanced ROTC.
The line at the Bursar's office reminded one of a
two-hit peej) show, liills were paid and tickets were
houKht while the secretaries were mentally seduced.
The registration tables became the focal point of
the upperclassmen's attention. Sophomores ploried
in their first electives. Juniors contemplated their
niaicis. In mass hy.steria, amid torn fin>rernails and
chewed pencils, Seniors counted hours and re-
checked quality points.
Confusion reijrned for several days as quite a few
people deserted .some of the professors while there
was still time. Durinjr that period, "the Collepe
Man" began to find his place. His cap assumed its
automatic fold, and he boujrht his pipe at the stud.
The mould was the same; only the faces varied from
vear to year.
Classes were qnickiij forgotten us WIXTER brought one of the most
"severe storms" the community had known.
The daily P. 0. TRIP was threatened with alteration.
Students and faculty observed their
crowded classrooms with dismay. Spirited
remarks were forthcoming, and almost
everyone made some comment about the
unwise decision of the Board of Trustees
to enlarge the student body. But the de-
cision was irrevocable, and the rooms
swelled with the fetid fetii of studenthood.
Amid the solemnity of opening classes
Freshmen inanely chanted their cry :
"Hey ! Hey ! We're the ones !
We're the class of '61 !"
Their days of significance, however,
were passing. There would be moments
during Rush Week when "the College
Man" felt his importance, but for the most
part, he meekly conformed. He had assimi-
lated enough Davidson lore and manner-
isms to look almost-smooth on his first
visit to the pig-pen on Selwyn Avenue in
Charlotte. He glanced at his new crew cut
and straightened the new tie. The folks
were quite impressed when Parents' Day
finally came.
There were the usual gripes. Chapel and
\'espers came around as inevitably as
classes. The as.signments and the parallel
were .soundly cursed. It might be added
that no one was impressed when word got
around that the Physics Department was
now departmentalized.
The daily P. O. route was threatened
with alteration, but the new path did not
become a reality for several months. The
innovation of the new language laboratory
meant that in addition to owning a "pony,"
l!ie Davidson student now had to apply a
smattering of mechanical knowledge to his
education. Study had thus become unbear-
alily complicated.
This inis tin UliKUAL AL'TS PUOCUAM at its l.rst.
Sonic i)raise(l the niorits of ;i jJi-oKressive
liberal arts education, while others wondered
where such an education mi^ht be found. Still
others indifferently sought deliverance throujrh
an escape to the Mooresville flick and thi-ou^h
the indulgence of "spiritual refreshments"
while they were "anchored" among friends.
About the only ones who showed .serious evi-
dence of individual initiative were the honors
students. This was the liberal arts program at
its best. These students pursued their partic-
ular interests through the haze of the profes-
sorial smoke ring and its accompanying obser-
vations.
St lid II had thus liccomr
I 'XBKA RA HL Y COM PLICA TED.
Cidt of CAFFEISE PHILOSOPHERS met dailij at
th' sfiidi lit I ni/ioriinn.
Still others found the choice pieces of their
educational experiences in the dormitory bull se.s-
sion, that wonderful boon to procrastination. The
tf>i)ics ran.ired from the nature of man and immor-
tality to Mansfield's exciting body and Mc-
Cutchan's enlightening mind. These recessed at
regular intervals when everyone adjourned from
cubicle, otlice, and library to join the Cult of Caf-
feine Philosophers at the .student emporium.
Thus, by effectively blending both the Old anfl
the New. Davidson progressed with a minimum
of difficulty.
Senior
OFFICERS
John Bernhardt _ _ _ President
Sonny Ferguson Vice-President
Roger Bates Secretary-Treasurer
Bernhardt
Bates
Ferguson
Class
will II till ititillictiial uniiil niirli-
ed a hreakitif/ paint, "up "" )<>(id"
bvcamv the pnsxirurd nf the daij.
'The village all declared how much he knew:
'Twas certain he could write, and cipher too;
Lands he could measure, terms and tides presage,
And ev'n the story ran that he could frauKC
While words of learned length and thund'ring sound
Amaz'd the jrazinK rustics ranjr'd around.
And still they ^az'd, and still the wonder ^rew
That one small head could carry all he knew!"
— Oliver Goldsmith
Senior knitir-hoir and indirid-
iiality were often snppresned
by what "Ab said" or ROTC
SOP.
Senior
^^M
.l(»hn Earl Adkins, Jr. . . . Sumter, S. C.
. . . Chemistry . . . lIRil' . . . Gamma Sipma
Epsikin, President . . . Honorary Fraternity
CounL-il . . . Male Chorus . . . Phi Mu Alpha
. . . YMCA . . . David H. Howard Award.
Robert Follin Armfield . . . Winston-Salem,
N. C. . . . Economics . . . Kii . . . Business-
Economics Association . . . YMCA . . . Golf.
Koherl Flowers Baker . . . Durham, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . Kii . . . Business-Eco-
nomics Association . . . Honorary Fraternity
Council . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. .\ . Spanish
Club . . . YMCA . . . Beayer Club, President
. . . Basketball.
Ralph Noble Bassett . . . Fort Valley, Ga.
. . . Economics . . . *AW, Secretary . . . Busi-
ness-Economics Association . . . Chapel Choir
. . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . . Scabbard and Blade
. . . YMCA . . . Wrestling.
Roger Allen Bates . . . Waycross, Ga. . . .
Pre-Med . . . :i.\, Vice-President . . . Alpha
Epsilon Delta . . . Cheerleader . . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society . . . Secretary-Treas-
urer of Senior Class.
David Robertson Beckham, ,Ir. . . . Winns-
boro, S. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . liwil . . . D Club
. . . ROTC, 2nd Lt. . . . Baseball, Manager
. . . Football, Manager.
Howell Vaught Bellamy .
S. C. . . . History . . . :i\K
Relations Club.
Myrtle Beach,
. International
John Christian Bernhardt, Jr. . . . Lenoir,
N. C. . . . Chemistry . . . K:i . . . Alpha Epsilon
Delta, Secretary . . . Chapel Choir . . . David-
soiiian. Editorial Staff . . . Eumanean Lit-
erary Society, Secretary . . . Gamma Sigma
Epsilon . . . Omicron Delta Kappa, Treasurer
. . . Phi Beta Kappa . . . Sigma Pi Sigma
. . . Sigma Upsilon, Vice-President . . . Stu-
dent Government, 2nd Vice-President . . .
Secretary of Sophomore Class . . . President
of Senior Class . . . Who's Who in Aincrican
Colleges and Universities . . . YMCA, Board
of Directors . . . Beaver Club . . . Wrestling.
Page Twei)ty eig,ht
Ch
ISS
William l.i-il(iii\ lioiuhiranl . . . \\'ii)stnii-
Saleni, N. C. . . . Kcuiiuinics . . . lu->ll. Sec-
retary, President . . . Business-Kconomics
Association. Hoard of Diroctors . . . Pariil-
soiiiiiii. Feature Kditor . . . Kumaiieaii Lit-
erary Society . . . Honorary Fraternity Coun-
cil .. . Oniicron Delta Kappa. President . . .
Student Government . . . Wlm's Wlm in
Anirrican Culliiiis and rnircrsilii s . . .
YMCA. Cabinet . . . Wildnit Htintlhiuik, Busi-
ness Manager . . . Ajrnes Sentelie I'rowii
Scholarship.
James (■ii).son Hoyce . . . Charlotte, N. C.
. . . KcoMoniics . . . i'l'K, Treasurer . . . Husi-
ness-Fconomics Association . . . Internation-
al Relations Club . . . Male Chorus . . . Phil-
anthropic Literars' Society . . . YMCA . . .
Film Committee.
David Speir Bradford . . . Charlotte. .\'. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . i\i;. \'ice-President . . .
Alpha Fpsilon Delta . . . Omicron Delta Kap-
pa, \'ice-President . . . Publications Board
. . . ()nii)s (ind Cranks, F^ditoi'-in-Chief . . .
Wlid'a Willi in American Cidlcfiis and I'ni-
rrrsitiis . . . Phi Beta Kapi)a.
Stewart (laihraith Brid^man . . . McClellan-
ville, S. C. . . . Histoi-y . . . Chapel Choir
. . . Concert Hand . . . Football Hand . . . Phi
Mu Alpha . . . ROTC Hand . . . YMCA.
MiU.
Ralph (iarber Bright . . . Greensboro, N. C.
. . . Psvcholofrv . . . iAK, Secretarv, Trea.s-
urer . ." . Concert Band . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt.
. . . Student Government . . . Secretary-
Treasurer of Junior Class . . . YMCA . . .
President of the College Union Committee
Chairmen.
Cecil .Max Bryan
Fntrlish . . . -i-ah .
Psi . . . Track . .
2nd Lt.
. . Raleijrh, N. C. . . .
D Club . . . Sipma Delta
Swimming . . . ROTC,
(;e;)rue Daniel Buckley . . . Tampa, Fla. . . .
Husine.ss Administration . . . i.\ . . . Busi-
ness-Economics A.s.sociation . . . Spanish
Club.
.John Weaver Campbell . . . Charlotte, N. C.
. . . History . . . 'Iai->. Treasurer . . . YMCA.
Page Twenty-nine
Senior
Donald Monroe Carmichael . . . Louisville,
Kentucky . . . EiiRlish. Philo.soph\ . . . Alii
. . . Concert Band . . . Eumanean Literary
Society . . . Interfraternity Council, Treas-
urer . . . Honorary Fraternity Council . . .
Phi Mu Alpha, Secretary, President . . .
Scrij)it< 'n Pi-cuikn, Editorial Staff . . .
Sigma Upsilon . . . Spanish Club . . . Baker
Scholar.
Ernest Willoughby Carpenter . . . Green-
wood, S. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . *rA, Secretary
. . . Gamma Sigma Epsilon, Treasurer . . .
Soipts 'n Prankfi. Business Staff . . . Track,
Manager.
Charles Edwin Carter . . . Mt. Airy, N. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . K.\ . . . Concert Band . . .
Football Band . . . Philanthropic Literary
Society.
Locke Yancey Carter . . . Kingsport, Tenn.
. . . Pre-Med . . . KA, Secretary . . . Phil-
anthropic Literary Society . . . YMCA.
"WSKf^W-'
Loyd Walter Chapin, Jr. . . . Atlanta, Ga.
. . . English and History . . . ATI), President,
Vice-President, Rush Chairman . . . David-
sonian. Editorial Staff . . . Delta Phi Alpha
. . . Football Band . . . Eumanean Literary
Society, Secretary . . . Omicron Delta Kappa
. . . Phi Beta Kappa . . . Sigma Upsilon . . .
Student Government . . . Who's Who in
American Colleges and Universities . . .
YMCA, President, Cabinet ... Eta Sigma
Phi . . . Baker Scholar . . . Chairman, Fresh-
man Council.
Walter Jackson Coleman
Fla. . . . Business . . . KA
Literary Society.
. Jacksonville,
. Philanthropic
William Carroll Colston . . . Rocky Mount,
N. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . IIKA . . . Alpha Epsilon
Delta . . . Delta Phi Alpha . . . Gamma Sigma
Epsilon, Secretary . . . Phi Beta Kappa.
Donald Lee Copeland
. . . Pre-Med . . . Ki.
Davidson, N. C.
Page Thirty
CI.
iss
Si(lnt'\ Claremi' ('o\, Jr. .
(l.-i Kcoiiomio i \l..
W'aNMi'slnin
Hiiuh Kunu'tU' (rain. .Ir. . . . ('oiuoril, N. ('.
. . . Mii.sii' , . . IIK \ . . . Alpha P.si OnieKa . .
Concert Haiul . . . Ko()tl)all l^and . . . Mak-
Chorii.s . . . I'hilaiithropic Literarv Society
. . . Phi Mil .\lpha . . . Red and Black Ma.s-
i|uer.s.
Ralph Ray ('rain. Jr. . . . Ga.stonia, N. C.
. . . Husiiu'ss . . . i<l'K . . . Hii.sines.s-Economics
A.s.sociation . . . Red and Black Masqiier.s.
Robert Hinton Crittenden . . . Raleigh, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . IIK A, Secretary . . . Busi-
ness-Economics A.s.sociation . . . Philanthrop-
ic 1-iterarv Societv . . . ROTC, 211(1 Lt.
Fuirman Preston Cumminn . . . Nashville.
Tenn. . . . Biology . , . Camera Club, Sec-
retary-Treasurer . . . Concert Band . . . Le
Cercfe Francais . . . Phi Mu Alpha . . . Quips
and Cranks. Editorial Staff . . . Phi Beta
Kappa.
Richard Eugene Cumminn • . • Ocala, Fla.
. . . Psychology . . . Chapel Choir . . . Euma-
nean Literary Society . . . Phi Mu Alpha.
Vice-President . . . Sigma Upsilon. Secre-
tary, Treasurer . . . Freshman Council.
Emmett Randolph Daniel . . . Richmond, Va.
. . . History . . . Le Cercle Francais . . . Phil-
anthropic Literary Society . . . YMCA . . .
Eta Sigma Phi.
Charles Edward Davis . . . Huntington, W.
Va. . . . English . . . iN . . . Le Cercle Fran-
cais . . . Srrii)tK 'n Pranks, Editorial Staff
. . . Sigma Upsilon . . . YMCA.
Page Thirty one
Senior
Calvin (Jrier Davis, Jr. . . . Asheville, N. C.
. . . EiiKlish Honors . . . iX, Secretary, Presi-
dent . . . Eta Sigma Phi, Vice-President . . .
Davidsoniau, Editorial Staff . . . Male Cho-
rus, Vice-President, President . . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society . . . Publications
Board . . . Scripts 'n Pranks, Editor . . . Sigma
Upsilon . . . Who's Who in American Colleges
and Universities . . . YMCA . . . Track . . .
Wrestling.
Hilary Roche Davis . . . Savannah, Ga. . . .
Physics . . . i'l'K, Boarding House Manager.
Cecil Davis Dickson . . . Shelby, N. C. . . .
Business . . . II KA, Treasurer . . . Business-
Economics Association . . . Spanish Club.
Rex H. Dillingham, Jr. . . . Lancaster, S. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . :ix, Secretary.
Charles Stitt Drummond, Jr. . . . Winston-
Salem, N. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . ITKA. President,
Vice-President, Rush Chairman . . . Alpha
Epsilon Delta, Vice-President . . . Gamma
Sigma Epsilon . . . Philanthropic Literary
Society, Treasurer.
Jerry Jay Eller . . . Greensboro, N. C. . . .
Chemistry . . . :i'l'K, President, Rush Chair-
man . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta, Historian
. . . Delta Phi Alpha, Secretary-Treasurer
. . . Football Band . . . Gamma Sigma Epsi-
lon, Hi.storian . . . YMCA . . . Baseball.
Frank Creighton Emerson . . . Moylan, Pa.
. . . Physics . . . IIK^^ . . . Concert Band . . .
Football Band ... Phi Mu Alpha . . . Sigma
Pi Sigma.
David Jerry Fagg . . . High Point, N. C.
. . . Psychology . . . *rA, President . . . Court
of Control . ." . D Club . . . Omicron Delta
Kappa . . . Whti's Who in American Colleens
and r)iireisities . . . YMCA . . . Reaver
Club . . . Football, Co-Captain . . . Track
. . . Wrestling, Captain . . . Athletic Council.
Page Thirty-two
Ch
iss
I'lt'slon .McKaniic KiiKKiirt . . . Cinii'ord, N. ('.
. . . Musii- . . . ( Iwipt-l Clioir. PresitU-iit . . .
Concert Hand. X'ici'-Pii'sidfiil . . . Kootltall
liimd . . . IMiilaiitliiiipii- Lili'iarv Society
. . , I'hi .Mil .Ml. ha.
Hen Wirt Farley . . . lloUiii.-^, \'a. . . . lli.stoiy
. . . I'liilaiitlu«)|)ic [,itt'iarv Society . . . Si^nia
fpsilnii . . . VMC.A . . . Kta Sijrnia IMii.
Charles Noel I'ee/.or . . . Salisl)iiry. N. C.
. . . Pre-.Meii . . . IlK-l' . . . Alpha Ep.silon
Delta . . . Si>rma Delta Pi . . . YMCA . . .
Coif.
Koner Wiles I'elker . . . Coiuiird. N. C. . . .
liusiiu's.-; . . . V.MCA.
1^ W Jp^:^
Harry .Ma.son Ferguson. Jr. . . . York, S. C.
. . . Hi.story . . . K.\ . . . D Club . . . Student
Goyernment . . . Vice-President of Senior
Class . . . YMCA . . . Beayer Club . . .
Basketball.
(Jary Wickard Fisher . . . Raleigh, N. C.
. . . History . . . O-Aw . . . ROTC, l.st Lt.
. . . y.mca!
^h^
(Jiles Cowan Floyd . . . Charlotte, N. C. . . .
. . . Pre-Med . . . •l>Jk«-) . . . Alpha Epailon
Delta . . . YMCA.
Kenneth Paul Forester. Jr. . . . Sumter, S. C.
. . . liiisiiiess . . . K:i . . . Busines.s-Economics
As.sociation, \'ice-President, Board of Direc-
tors . . . Dufidsiniian. Business Staff . . .
Eumanean Literary Society . . . Qiii/ts and
('rn)ikx. P.usine.ss Staff . . . ROTC. Major
. . . Scabljard and Blade, Treasurer . . .
YMCA. Cabinet.
Page Thirty three
-yx^
h£M
Senior
William Bradford Fraley . . . Gaffney, S. ('.
. . . History . . . KA . . . Concert Band . . .
Football Band . . . Philanthropic Literary
Society . . . Student Government . . . WIio's
Who in American Colleges and Universities
. . . YMCA, Cabinet . . . Freshman Advisor.
Emory Alien Fry . . . Greensboro, N. C. . . .
Philosophy and Psychology . . . Bwn . . .
Cheerleader . . . Davidsonian, Business Staff
. . . YMCA.
John H. Frye. Ill . . . Oak Ridge, Tenn.
. . . Psvchologv . . . IIK<I>, Secretary, President
. . . ROTC, 2nd Lt. . . . Sigma Upsilon.
James Alexander Gardner . . . Salem, Va.
. . . Pre-Med . . . :^<1>E, Secretary . . . Alpha
Epsilon Delta, Secretary . . . Camera Club
. . . Eumanean Literary Society . . . Gamma
Sigma Epsilon . . . YMCA . . . Freshman
Chemistry Award.
George Hudson Gilmer . . . Hampden-Syd-
ney, Va. . . . Physics and Math . . . Delta
Phi Alpha . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Phi
Beta Kappa.
Dale Illick Gramley
. . . Economics . . .
ternitv Council . . .
dent .■. . YMCA . . .
tain.
. . . Winston-Salem, N. C.
Hwll . . . Honorary Fra-
Sigma Delta Psi. Presi-
Football . . . Track, Cap-
Jerry Hunt Greene . .
Economics . . . Ki . .
Association . . . D Club
Charlotte, N. C. . . .
Business-Economics
. . YMCA . . . Soccer.
Henry Claude Griffin . . . Davidson, N. C.
. . . Chemistry and Physics . . . <i>rA, Treas-
urer . . . D Club . . . Delta Phi Alpha . . .
Eumanean Literary Society . . . Gamma Sig-
ma Epsilon . . . Honorary Fraternity Coun-
cil, Secretary . . . Sigma Pi Sigma, Secretary-
Treasurer, President . . . YMCA . . . Fresh-
man Council . . . Cross Country . . . Wrest-
ling, Captain.
Page Thirty-four
Ch
iss
(•illierl Diuiii (uo.-vNinan . . . .l!uksnii\ illf,
Kla. . . . I're-Metl . . . Ilk'l-. Hoarding' llctiisf
Mana>rer . . . ('oncert liaiid . . . Foot hall
Maiul . . . Kt'd aiiil Klai'k .Masquers.
Churles 'I'homa.s Hai^til. -'r. . . . Fayrttrvilk-.
N. C. . . . Kii^rlish . . . iikI'.
.lame.s Uealx Hamlninht . . . BurliiiKluii,
N. C. . . . Pre-Meil . . . IIK-I- ... I) Club
. . . Spanish Club . . . Track.
IJrown McCallum Hamer. .Jr. . . . Hamer,
S. C. . . . Economics . . . ki, Secretary
. . . Business-Economics Association . . .
Quips (ukI Cranks. Business Staff . . . Sijrma
Pi Sijrma . . . YMCA . . . P\)()tball.
William Lee Hand . . . Jack.sonville, Fla. . . .
Pre-.Med . . . IIKA, Treasurer . . . Alpha Ep-
silon Delta . . . Gamma Sijrma Epsilon . . .
Honorary Fraternity Council . . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society, President, Secre-
tary.
Waller Bennett Harris . . . Ocala, Fla. . . .
Business . . . KA, Treasurer . . . Busines.s-
P>conomics A.ssociation . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt.
. . . YMCA.
Edward McGowan Hedjiepeth. Jr. . . . Chapel
Hill. X. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . iAK . . . YMCA.
Charles (iordon Helms . . . Atlanta, Ga. . . .
English Honors . . . l.\. Secretary . . . Eta
Sipma Phi . . . Philanthropic Literary So-
ciety . . . YMCA.
Page Thirl\five
Senior
(ieorue Capers Hemingway, Jr. . . . Win-
ston-Salem, N. (".... Pre-Med . . . Hwil,
Vice-President . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . . Scab-
bard and Blade . . . Rifle Team, Co-Captain.
Howard Clark Hoagiand
. . . PsycholoK.v . . . i;.\
Masquers.
Richmond, Va.
Red and Black
John Hayden Hollingsworlh . . . Roanoke,
Va. . . . Pre-Med . . . UK A, Secretary, Pledge
Master . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta . . . Chapel
Choir . . . Interfraternity Council . . . Gamma
Sigma Epsilon . . . Philanthropic Literary
Society.
Claude William Hopper, Jr. . . . Waynesboro,
Ga. . . . Business . . . 'J'Aw . . . Business-
Economics Association . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt.
. . . Spanish Club.
Arthur Little Howard . . . Lenoir, N. C. . . .
Economics . . . <I'A(-), Chaplain . . . Business-
Economics Association . . . D Club . . . Phil-
anthropic Literary Society . . . Spanish Club
. . . YMCA . . . Football.
Phillip Fullerton Howerton, Jr. . . . Charlotte,
N. C. . . . History . . . iAK, Vice-President
. . . Soipts 'ii Pranks, Editorial Staff . . .
Spanish Club.
William Thomas Huntley, HI . . . Southern
Pines, N. C. . . . Economics . . . iX, Board-
ing House Manager . . . Business-Economics
Association . . . YMCA.
Harry Joe Huskins . . . Gastonia, N. C. . . .
Economics . . . nK<l>, Social Chairman . . .
Interfraternity Council, Dance Chairman.
Page Thirty-six
Ch
I s s
K(lw;ir(l l.iisator lr\in . . . Winston-Salem,
\. ( . . . . Kiimoniiis . . . U(-tlI. Trt'asnri-r
. . . I^iisiness-Kcononiics Association, Hoard
ol" Directors ... I) Clul) . . . (Jiiii)s tnnl
Cnnihs, pAlitorial Staff . . . ROTC. ind l-t.
. . . BeavtM' Clul) . . . Soccer.
.lohn Udlu'il .Itihnxin . . . .Mnrristnwii, Tenii.
. . . Malh . . . 'I'Ai-'. I'rcsidi'iit, Rush Chair-
man . . . Daritlsoiiiiiii. .Sports JMlitor, Asso-
ciate Kditor . . . ROTC. ( 'ai)taiii . . . .Scab-
bard and Blade . . . VMCA . . . Sijrma Pi
Si^ma, Secretary.
.lames .Archibald .lones. III . . . Richmond,
\a. . . . Kn^iish . . . iSK . . . Cheerleader,
Head . . . Classics Club . . . Interfraternity
Council . . . Le Cerclc Francais . . . Male
Chorus.
Robert (JriRilh .lones . . . Norfolk, Va. . . .
Philosophy' . . . 'MA. Secretary . . . Chapel
Choir . . . lhiri(l.'«i>ii(ni. P^ditorial Staff . . .
Eumanean Literary Society, Vice-President
. . . Interfraternity Council, President . . .
Honorary Fraternity Council . . . Who's Wlm
iti American CoIIcficx and UnivcrKitics . . .
YMCA . . . Dan 1. McKeithen Memorial
Scholarshii) . . . .Sw immin^r.
(ieorge Franklin Kemmerer, .Ir. . . . Levit-
town. Pa. . . . Kn^lish . . . l-M-:. Pledge Train-
er .. . Alpha Psi OmeKa, Secretary-Treas-
urer . . . Eumanean Literary Society . . .
Interfraternity Council . . . Honorary Fra-
ternity Council . . . Red and Black Masquers,
President, Treasurer . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt.
. . . Sijrma Delta Pi, Vice-President . . . Sifrma
Upsilon . . . Spanish Club . . . YMCA.
Robert Carter Keown . . . Rome, (la. . . . Pre-
Med . . . llK'l', Treasurer . . . Alpha Epsilon
Delta . . . Philanthropic Literary Society
. . . Spanish Club.
William Edward Kestler. .Ir. . . . Concord,
N. (.'.... Economics . . . iN . . . Busine-s.s-
Economics A.s.sociation . . . A. K. Phifer
Scholar.
.lohn Thomas KimbrouRh. .Ir. . . . Davidson,
N. C. . . . P.sycholoKy . . . Kl . . . Publications
Board, Secretary . . . Quips nnri Cranks,
Busine.ss Manager.
/'fi};c Thirly-icvcn
Senior
Julian (iilmour Lake . . .
N. C. . . . English . . . Kl . .
of Junior Class . . . YMCA
Winston-Salem,
. Vice-President
. . Golf.
Charles Gordon Lampley . . . Shelby, N. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . bmII . . . D Club . . .Gamma
Sigma Epsilon . . . YMCA . . . Wrestling.
Ronald Vance Lanford . . . Woodruff, S. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . .\T<> . . . Chapel Choir
. . . YMCA.
Gray Nisbet Lewis . . . Statesville, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . IIK.A, Boarding House
Manager . . . Business-Economics Associa-
tion . . . Le Cercle Francais.
Phillip Andrew Lewis . . . Durham, N. C.
. . . History . . . <^A("), Warden. Boarding
House Manager . . . Court of Control. Judge
. . . Davidsonian, Editorial Staff . . . Delta
Phi Alpha . . . Omicron Delta Kappa . . .
Who's Who in American Colleges and IJvi-
versities.
Carl Wainwright Loftin . . . Weaverville,
N. C. . . . Hi.story . . . *rA, Pledge Trainer
. . . Scrij)ts 'u P)anks. Business Staff . . .
YMCA.
William Banks Long. Jr. . . . Greenville, S. C.
. . . English . . . iAK, Social Chairman . . .
International Relations Club . . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society . . . ROTC, 1st Lt.
. . . So'ipfs 'n P)-anks. Co-Editor . . . Sigma
Upsilon . . . YMCA . . . Freshman Council.
Jack Byrd Lucas . . . Sanford, N. C. . . . Pre-
Med . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta.
Page Thirty-eight
Ch
ISS
Kdwin A(lt>l|)h laiplu'iKiT . . . Atlanta, (ia.
. . . Kc()iit>mii's . . . I'.iisiiu'ss-Kc'oiioniics As-
sociation . . . C'onct'it Haiiil . . . K<)(>tl)all liand
. . . International Kclations Cliil) . . . VMCA.
Arthur >iin(>nl<in l,>nn, Jr. . . . Allx'Piarli'.
N. ('.... l'rt'-.Mt.'il . . . Ki. lioanliiiK lioiisi-
ManajriT . . . Alpha Ki)silon Delta . . . YMCA
. . . Heaver ("lub . . . Football . . . Track.
Duncan CaUin McC orniick ... St. Taiils,
N. C. . . . .Mathematics . . . i\ . . . David-
si„ii<i,i. Kditorial Statl' . . . ROTC", l.st Lt.
. . . V.MCA.
('harle.«< Edwin Mcdowan . . . Greenville, N. (".
. . . PsNcholoK.v . . . k A, iioardinjr House
Mana^rer . . .Business-Economics Association
. . . Chapel Choir . . . Daridstniian. P^ditoriai
Staff . . . ROTC, l.st Lt. . . . YMCA.
(iraham McKinnon, III . . . Port Lavaca, Tex.
. . . English . . . i.\ . . . Philanthropic Lit-
erary Society . . . ROTC, Major . . . YMCA
David Pearson McLain. .Ir. . . . Cleveland,
Tenn. . . . English . . . H<-)ll . . . D Club, Sec-
retarv-Treasurer . . . Philanthropic Literary
Societv . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . . Spanish Club
. . . Beaver Club . . . Football.
.\lton Dudley McLean . . . Aberdeen, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . Business-Economics As-
sociation.
.John Harvey .McVay . . . Front Royal, Va.
. . . Enplish . . . llkA . . . Le Cercle Francais
Male Chorus . . . Philanthropic Literary
Society ... Phi Mu Alpha . . . YMCA, Cab-
inet.
Page Thirty -nine
Senior
Robert Alexander MacRae . . . Mt. (lilead,
N. C. . . . Physics . . . iN . . . Interfraternity
Council . . . Le Cercle Francais . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society . . . Si^ma Pi SiRma
. . . YMCA, Cabinet.
John Campbell Mackorell, Jr. . . . MorKanton,
N. C. . . . Economics . . . iika, Social Chair-
man . . . Business-Economics Association
. . . Golf.
Joseph Carl Malinoski, Jr. . . . New Smyrna
Beach, Fla. . . . History . . . II KA, Hi.storian
. . . Concert Band . . . Football Band . . .
Philanthropic Literary Society . . . YMCA.
Jack McMichael Martin . . . David.son, N. C.
. . . History . . . Ki . . . D Club . . . David-
sonian . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt. . . . Basketball . . .
Tennis . . . Phi Beta Kappa.
Ernest Edward Mason, Jr. . . . Pensacola,
Fla. . . . Psychology . . . KA . . . Male Chorus.
John Gray Maynard, Jr. . . . Cheraw, S. C.
. . . Economics . . . K5, Treasurer, Presi-
dent . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta . . . Business-
Economics Association, President, Board of
Directors . . . Honorary Fraternity Council
. . . Omicron Delta Kappa . . . ROfC, Major
. . . Scabbard and Blade . . . Spanish Club
. . . Who's Who in American CoUec/es and
Universities.
Wayne Norris Miller . . . Charlotte, N. C.
. . . Business . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt.
Hugo A. Misle . . . Quito, Ecuador . . . History
. . . \t;} . . . Eumanean Literary Society
. . . International Relations Club, President
. . . Honorary Fraternity Council, Vice-Pres-
ident . . . Sigma Delta Pi, President . . .
Spanish Club, President . . . YMCA.
Pa^e Forty
Ch
iss
Charles Allen Moure , . . Rali'ijrh, N. ('. . . .
Kioiioniics . . . i\ . . . MusitU'Ss-Ki'ononiic-s
Associatimi ... I) (liil) . . . liasohall.
Edwurd I.ee Mtxire . , . North Wilki'slHim.
N. ('.... KiikHsIi . . . i'l'l.. Sfcrt'tary . . .
Camera Cliili . . . Kiiniaiu'aii i.ittTar\' Socift.v
. . . Mall' Cliorii.-i . . . Sijrnia I'p.silon . . .
Cliairniaii, I'liiuii Film ('(immittoe.
I.orie Wilson Moore . . . Lake City, S. ('.
Pro-Mod . . . Ciincort Band . . . Football
Hand . . . Siiaiiish Clul).
Calvin Vere .Morgan. .Ir lohnson City,
Tenn. . . . Pro-Mod ... K A, Rush Chairman
. . . YMCA . . . SwinimiuK.
^i^ -%.
^^^
iuV
iUi
Pvlford Hamilton Morgan . . . Spartaninirp.
S. C. . . . History . . . I{i-)ll . . . Philanthropic
Literary Society . . . Spanish Club.
John (iarland Morgan . . . Sprinp Hope, N. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . Ki . . . YMCA . . . Beaver
Club, Vice-President . . . Basketball.
Charles Bradlev Norris. Jr. . . . Raleijrh, N. C.
. . . Historv . . .'VM-K Warden . . . ROTC.
1st Lt.
James Culvin Morris. Ill . . . .Anchora>ro. Ky.
. . . Pre-Med . . . K A . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta
. . . [)avi(ls(i)ii(t)i. Editorial Staff . . . Philan-
thropic Literary Society. Treasurer.
Page Forty one
Senior
Shepard Drake Nash
. . . Pre-Med . . . Kii.
St. Pauls, N. C.
Sp<»ttsw<»(>d Pryor Neale . . . Tampa, Fla. . . .
Pre-Med . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta . . . D
Club . . . Gamma Sigma Epsilon . . . Spanish
Club . . . YMCA . . . Wrestling.
Robert Perrin Oliver . . . Matthews, N. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . Bwil, Social Chairman
. . . Eumanean Literary Society . . . Le Cercle
Francais . . . Spanish Club . . . Golf . . .
Swimming.
David Charon Page . . .
. . . Economics . . . KA.
Association, Treasurer
2nd Lt. . . . Baseball.
Southern Pines, N. C.
. Business-Economics
. . . D Club . . . ROTC,
David William Palmer, .Ir. . . . Raleigh, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . Business-Economics As-
sociation . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . . Scabbard
and Blade . . . Swimming . . . Rifle Team.
Harry Owen Paschall . . . Plant City, Fla.
. . . Bible and Religion . . . IIKA, Boarding
House Manager, Pledge Master . . . Alpha
Psi Omega, President . . . Delta Phi Alpha,
Vice-President . . . Honorary Fraternity
Council . . . Philanthropic Literary Society,
Secretary . . . Red and Black Masquers,
Treasurer . . . YMCA ... Eta Sigma Phi.
John Albert Patterson . . . Shelby, N. C.
. . . Pre-Dental . . . :i.\ . . . Beaver Club
. . . Baseball . . . Cross Country.
Samuel Curtis Patterson . . . Cramerton, N. C.
. . . English . . . Le Cercle Francais . . . Male
Chorus . . . Phi Mu Alpha, Historian . . .
Eta Sigma Phi . . . Phi Beta Kappa.
Page Forty-two
CI.
ISS
William Claylon I'atton . . . Charlotte. N. ('.
. . . I'rt'-Mi'd . . . 'I'Ai-i . . . I><tri(lsiiiiinii, Kdi-
torial Staff . . . '.'c/'/in dinl Crtnihs, Si-iiior
("lass Kditiir . . . Y.MCA.
Kdward Malcolm raxiu-. Ill . . . Hoikk-y, \V.
\'a. . . . I'liMHidiiiii's ... i\ \, Historian . . .
Busiiu'ss-Kconomics Association . . . D Club
. . . l>ari(lsiinian. Kditorial Stall' . . . Hon-
orary Fraternity Council . . . I'hihmthroijic
Literary Society . . . ROTC. Major . . . Scab-
hard and Blade. Cai)tain . . . Spanish Club
. . . VMCA . . . Wildcat Handbook Staff
. . . Outstanding,' MS III, 1956-57 . . . (Jolf.
NMIIiam I.(»omis I'omeroy, Jr. . . . Waycross,
Ca. . . . I're-.Med . . . K.\. Rush Chairman,
President . . . Aii)ha ?>psil()n Delta, Presi-
dent . . . Davidsonidii. F^ditoriai Staff . . .
Honorary Fraternity Council, President . . .
Omicron Delta Kappa . . . Phi Beta Kappa
. . . Philanthropic Literary Society, Secre-
tary, Vice-President . . . Who's Who in Amer-
ican Collcf/is and Universities.
Roger Everett Powell . . . Louisville, Ky. . . .
Economics . . . i\K, President. Vice-Presi-
dent, Pledge Trainer . . . Business-Economics
As.sociation. Board of Directors . . . Liter-
national Relations Club . . . ROTC, Captain
. . . Scabbard and Blade . . . Spanish Club
. . . YMCA.
William Foster Price . . . Favetteville, N. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . m-.n . . . D Club . . . ROTC,
Capt. . . . Football, Captain . . . Who's Who
in American Colleges and i'niversiti<s.
Peter Henry Ramm .
. . . Pre-Med . . . i\K
Winston-Salem. N. C,
. . I) Club . . . Soccer.
Harney Brooks Kegen
. . . Historv . . . 'lA<-< .
YMCA . . . Ba.-^eball
. Nashville, Tenn.
Spanish Club . . .
. Wrestliiifr.
Baxter .Maurice Ritchie . . . Concord. X. C.
. . . Economics . . . \Ti>, Boardinjr House
Manajrer . . . Chapel Choir . . . Liternational
Relations Club . . . ^Lde Chorus . . . VMCA.
Pa^e Forty-three
Senior
Harding Winslow Rogers
N. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . 2X.
Mooresville,
DeWitt Frank Roper . . . Pensacola, Fla. . . .
Classical Languages . . . Philanthropic Lit-
erary Society . . . Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer.
Malcolm Henderson Rourk, Jr. . . . Shallotte,
N. C. . . . English, Pre-Med . . . i't'K, Vice-
President . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta, Treas-
urer . . . Chapel Choir . . . Concert Band
Delta Phi Alpha. Secretary, Treasurer,
President
President
Eumanean Literary Society,
Gamma Sigma Epsilon
Honorary Fraternity Council
Phi Beta
Kappa
YMCA
Phi Mu Alpha, Secretary . .
Freshman Chemistry Award.
Frederick William Russell . . . Louisville, Ky.
. . . English . . . iiAK . . . Court of Control
. . . D Club . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . . Sigma
Delta Pi, Vice-President . . . Spanish Club
. . . S\yimming, Captain.
Marshall Craig Sasser . . . Conway, S. C.
. . . Economics, Biology . . . Ki, Vice-Presi-
dent . . . Business-Economics Association
. . . YMCA.
Robert Edward Sayers
. . . Pre-Med.
Bluefield, W. Va.
.James Hovt Sell, .Jr. . . . Monroe, N. C. . . .
. . . Sociology . . . iN . . . YMCA.
Ralph Chapman Setzler, .Jr. . . . Albemarle,
N. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . Ki . . . D Club . . .
Beaver Club . . . Football.
Page Forty-four
Ch
ISS
John (lilberl Shaw . . . Fiivettt-villt', N. ('.
. . . History . . . H.-.n . . . ROTC. 2ii(l Lt.
Wilddii UiiKi' Shipley . . . Aslu'villi', N. C.
. . . Kcuiioniics . . . l.\, Rush Chairniim,
Social ("hairman . . . ("heerit'adt'r . . . ROTC,
Captain . . . W'restliiijr.
Robert Dickson Sloan
. . . French-Knjrlish .
Francais. President .
. Charlotte. N. C.
'I'lA . . . Le Cercle
Siyrma Upsilon.
Osier Farrell Smith . . . Fayettevilie, N. C.
. . . I're-Med . . . (laiiinia Si^rnia F^psiloii.
Robert Moir Smith. .Jr. . . . Mt. Airy. N. C.
. . . PsycholoKy . . . IIKA . . . YMCA.
Walter (Juyton Smith, .Jr. . . . Charlotte, N. C.
. . . English . . . -I'lA . . . Sciiijts 'n Pranks,
Business Staff . . . YMCA.
Ross Jordan Smyth . . . Charlotte. N. C. . . .
KnKlish . . . iAK, Rush Chairman . . . Busi-
ness-Economics Association. Board of Direc-
tors . . . Chapel Choir . . . Cheerleader
. . . D Club . . . Eumanean Literary Society
. . . Omicron Delta Kappa . . . Quips mid
Cranks. Editorial Staff . . . ROTC, Major
. . . Scabbard and Blade . . . Student Gov-
ernment. Secretary-Treasurer, 1st Vice-Pres-
ident. President . . . Who's Who in American
Colhfics and I'nivrrsitics . . . Beaver Club
. . . Soccer, Captain . . . Howard Chemistry
Award . . . Union Carbide Scholarship . . .
Phi Beta Kappa.
Llewellyn Powell Spears, III . . . Louisville.
Ky. . . . Economics . . . iVK . . . Business-
Economics Association . . . D Club . . . In-
ternational Relations Club . . . ROTC. 2n(l
Lt. . . . Spanish Club . . . YMCA . . . Basket-
i>all.
Page Forty-fire
Senior
Robert Lee Stancil . . . Davidson, N. C. . . .
Economics . . . Business-Economics Associa-
tion . . . D Club . . . Football . . . YMCA.
Edward Turlington Stewart . . . Kirkwood,
Mo. . . . Pre-Med . . . 'I>Aw, Vice-President
. . . Alpha Epsilon Delta . . . Cheerleader
. . . D Club ... Phi Beta Kappa . . . YMCA
. . . Cross Country, Manager . . . Track . . .
Burlington Mills Scholarship.
Charles Theodore Stowe. Jr. . . . Belmont,
N. C. . . . Business Administration . . . Kii,
Business-Economics Association, Board of
Directors . . . Court of Control, Recorder
. . . D Club . . . Interfraternitv Council . . .
ROTC, Colonel . . . Scabbard and Blade . . .
Daniel B. Woods Award . . . Who's Who in
Anieficau Colleges and Universities . . .
Swimming . . . Rifle Team.
Robert Brown Taylor, .Jr. . . . Greensboro,
N. C. . . . Economics . . . Bmii . . . Business-
Economics Association.
William Timothy Teachey . . . Richmond, Va.
. . . Psychology . . . 2iX, President . . . Male
Chorus . . . ROTC, Major . . . Scabbard and
Blade . . . YMCA.
William Howard Tedford, Jr. . . . Newberry,
S. C. . . . Physics . . . IIKA, Historian . . .
Eumanean Literary Society . . . ROTC, 2n(l
Lt.
William Leonard Thomas . . . Raleigh, N. C.
. . . English . . . i<l>l': . . . Eumanean Literary
Society . . . YMCA.
William Earl Thompson . . . Spencer, N. C.
. . . English Honors . . . iiX, Secretary . . .
Cheerleader . . . Davidsoiiian, Editorial Staff
. . . Honorary Fraternity Council . . . Phil-
anthropic Literary Society . . . Qidps and
Crunks, Editorial Staff . . . Scripts 'u Pranks,
Editorial Staff . . . YMCA, Cabinet . . . Eta
Sigma Phi, Secretary, President . . . Baker
Scholar . . . Phi Beta Kappa.
d^M^iM
Pti^e Forty six
Ch
iss
'riioinas I ranklin I'hiailkill . . Ilapt'vilk',
(lii. . . . I'liiKlisli lloiiuis . . . \i'..', Sfcri'tary
. . . Delta I'hi Alpha . . . I'liitnaiU'aii Liti'iai\
Society, N'ict'-l'ifsiilfiit, I'li'sidi-nt . . . Hon-
orary Kratoniitv Coimcil . . . Mali- Chonis
. . . ROTC. 2n(l \A. . . . Eta SiKma Phi . . .
I'hi lU'ta Kappa.
.lohn Maiirico Trask, Jr. . . . iicaiifort, S. ('.
, . . Ki-niKHiiics , . . K \ . . . iiiisiiR'ss-Kco-
Moniics Association, Hoard of Directors . . .
I>(iri(ls(>iii(ui. Kditor-iii-Chicf . . . Iiitt-rfra-
ternity ("ouncii . . . International Relations
Chill . . . Honoi-ary Fraternity {'onncil . . .
Oniicron Delta Kappa . . . Philanthropic Lit-
erarv Societv . . . Publications Hoard, Chair-
man . . . ROTC, 2nd Lt. . . . Who's Who in
Aimrinui Collcqcs and UnivcrNitirx . . .
V.MCA.
.lames .lay Travi.ss . . . Winter Haven, Fla
. . . Cheniistrv . . . \ ii.' . . . Swimmintr.
Charles Henr.N Tripp, ,Ir.
. . . Chemistry . . . lll\i->
atrer.
. (Ireenville, S. C.
\Vre.><tlinjr. Man-
William Redd Turner . . . Clinton, S. C. . . .
Pre-Med . . . KA . . . Alpha Epsilon Delta
. . . ROTC, l.st Lt. . . . Scabbard and Blade
. . . Haseball . . . YMCA.
(Jeor^e Wilbur Urwick. .Ir. ,
.\. ('..,. Business . . . IIK'I'
Charlotte,
YMCA.
Shelhourne Wayne Wallace . . . KinKsport,
Tenn. . . . Economics . . . K.\, Vice-President
. . . Bu.sine.s.s-Economic.s Association, Secre-
tary, Board of Directors . . . D Club . . .
ROTC. Lt. Colonel . . . Scabbard and Blade
. . . Ba.seball, Captain . . . YMCA.
Alfred Shih-pu Wang . . . Shanghai, China
. . . Enjrlish . . . Phi Mu Alpha . . . Scripts
II Pranks, P^ditorial Staff . . . Sigma Upsilon
. . . YMCA.
Pa^e FoTtyseven
Senior
William Lee Warlick . . . Chattanooga, Tenii.
. . . History . . . 4'Am, Sports Manager . . .
D Club . . . Sigma Delta Psi, Vice-President
. . . Wrestling . . . YMCA.
Garrison Grier Watts, Jr. . . . Gaflfnev, S. C.
. . . Pre-Med . . . Ki . . . ROTC, 1st Lt. . . .
Scabbard and P.lade.
Harry Arthur Wells . . . Chester, S. C. . . .
Music . . . Chapel Choir . . . Male Chorus
... Phi Mu Alpha.
James Holroyd West, Jr. . . . Salisbury. N. C.
. . . Business . . . i+K . . . Baseball . . . Foot-
ball.
Joe Vaughan Williford . . . Richlands, Va.
. . . Physics . . . (tPA, Boarding House Man-
ager.
Boyd Eli Wilson, Jr. . . . Mount Olive, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . <1>V\ . . . Business-Eco-
nomics Association . . . Eumanean Literary
Society . . . Quips and Cranks, Business Staff.
Gerald Lee Wilson . . . Winston-Salem, N. C.
. . . History . . . B®ri . . . D Club . . . David-
sonian, Assistant Editor . . . Omicron Delta
Kappa . . . Philanthropic Literary Society
. . . Who's WJio in Anieiican Colleges and
Universities . . . YMCA, Cabinet . . . Young
Democrats Club, Vice-President . . . Editor
of Wildcat Handbook . . . Cross Country
. . . Track.
William Willard Wolfe . . . Gainesville. Fla.
. . . Hi-story and English . . . i*E . . . Chapel
Choir . . . Concert Band . . . Eumanean Lit-
erary Society . . . Football Band . . . Inter-
national Relations Club . . . Soipts 'n Pranks.
Editorial Staff . . . Sigma Upsilon . . . Span-
ish Club . . . Woodrow Wilson Award . . .
Presbyterian Scholar . . . Phi Beta Kajjpa.
Pfl^e Forty-eie)it
Ch
iss
l);i\i(l liiiu-'^l Woitd . . . \\'ii\iU'sl)i)i-(i. da.
. . . History . . . 'l-Ai-i . . . ROTC, 1st Lt.
. . . Spanish Clul) . . . YMCA . . . Swimming
Ivan Thomas WihkI
I'sycholuK.v ... K \
. . Marion. S. ('.
. KOTC. 2iui Lt.
Charles Alexander \V(K>ds . . . Greensboro,
N. V. . . . Pro-Med . . . l!<-)ll . . . Alpha P>psi-
lon Delta . . . Interfraternity Council . . .
riamnia Si^ma Epsilon . . . Track.
Pat .Munroe \\(K)d\vard . . . Quincy, F'la. . . .
Pre-Mfd . , . lAi-i, IMed^re Trainer . . . Alpha
Epsilon Delta . . . Interfraternity Council,
Secretary . . . Male Chorus . . . Student Gov-
ernment. Senior Class Representative . . .
Sophomore Cla.ss President . . . YMCA, Vice-
President. Board of Directors.
.lame.s CraiK Wool. Ill . . . Guntersville. Ala.
. . . History . . . IIK \ . . . Chapel Choir . . .
Concert Band . . . Football Band . . . Male
Chorus . . . Philanthropic Literary Society.
Robin Nathaniel Wooten. .Jr. . . . Monroe,
N. C. . . . Pre-Med . . . IIKA, Vice-President
. . . Le Cercle Francais . . . Philanthropic Lit-
erarv Societv.
.lames Hadley Zeh . . . Win.ston-Salem, N. C.
. . . Economics . . . i'l-K . . . Busine.s.s-Eco-
nomics As.sociation . . . Eumanean Literary
Society . . . YMCA . . . College Union Board
of Directors.
SPECIAL STl'DENTS
N. Y. Park . . . Korea.
(". A. .Sparrman . . . Burtrask, .Sweden.
Pjjje Forty-nine
OFFICERS
Roy Gilbert President
Sam Sloan Vice-President
Bill Ferguson Secretarii-Treasurer
Junior
Sloan
Ferguson
Gilbert
CL
ISS
Tdkiiiji (III (let in jKiit in r(iiii/iiis .; uiars <iiiiclil>i nnlizcd tluir
voU' for the riimin;/ iirar.
Organic Chemistnj, with its demanding hours and
amazing cnmplexitij, proved to he thi doirnfnU
of manii a Prv-Med.
"We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning togrether
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
Our dried voices, when
We whisper to^rether
Are quiet and meaningless."
— T. S. Eliot
J
unior
First row: Julian McClees Aldridge, Jr.;
Rocky Mount, N. C. ; William Leo Allen, Jr., Rock-
ingham, N. C. ; Tom Kins Anderson, Petersburg,
Va. ; Vernon Trippe Anderson, Jr., Union, S. C. ;
Peter Newton Andrews, Orange, Va. ; Ray Mills
Antley, Columbia, S. C. ; Charles Raymond At-
kinson, Charlotte, N. C.
Third row: John Seagle Bernhardt, Jr., Lenoir,
N. C; William Paul Biggers, Charlotte, N. C. ;
Walter Grady Bishop, Jr., Greenwood, S. C. ; Wil-
liam Robert Boland, Winter Haven, Fla. ; Paris
Edward Booth, Rocky Mount, N. C. ; Ernest Bruce
Brooks, Jr., Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Addison Clem
Bross, Greenwood, S. C.
Second row: Edward Callaway Austell, Spar-
tanburg, S. C. ; Robert Eugene Austin, Jr., Ocala,
Fla. ; Joseph Douglas Balentine, Greenville, S. C. ;
Kinchen Whitaker Ballentine, IH, Erwin, N. C. ;
Paul Warren Barbee, Asheboro, N. C. ; John Sam-
uel Bennett, Jr., Charlotte, N. C. ; Richard Barry
Benton, Lexington, Ky.
Fourth row: Edward Morrison Brown, Con-
cord, N. C. ; Henry Hill Brown, Davidson, N. C. ;
Prentice Earl Brown, Jr., Henderson, Ky. ; Ver-
non Seba Broyles, IH, Atlanta, Ga. ; Richard Fret-
well Brubaker, Macon, Ga. ; William Brantley
Burns, Jr., Atlanta, Ga. ; Donald Ray Byrd, Nor-
wood, N. C.
Page Fifty-two
Class
P ^ Q
p n (3 p.. n o
rS ^ p p p (t:, o,
Fi'j-.s/ >v)f; John Beale Howard Calciwell. Louis-
ville, Ky. ; HuRh Brown Campbeii, Jr., Charlotte,
N. C. ; Frank Carl Cenepy, Avenel. N. J. ; Arthur
Joe Chandler, Union Mills, N. C. ; Charles Belson
Marshall Chapman. Welch, \V. Va. ; Charles Hook-
er Chastain. Lakeland, Fla.; Julian Jerome Clark,
Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
Second roir: Samuel Clarke, Jr., Columbia, S.
C; Joe Fred Cline, Stony Point, N. C. ; Joseph
Robert Cole, Newnan, Ga. ; Francis Peterson Cole-
man, Jr., Huntersville, N. C. ; Charles Lee Cook,
Huntersville. N. C; Gordon Thames Couch, Pen-
sacola, Fla. ; William Walker Couch, Jr., Morpan-
ton, N. C.
Third roir: John Calvin Crawford, III, Mary-
ville, Tenn. ; Kenneth Murchison Currie, Jr., Wal-
lace, N. C; Tom Alfred Cuttinp, Fort Smith,
Ark. ; James McBride Dabbs. Jr.. Mayesville, S.
C. ; Carter Anderson Daniel, Charlottesville, Va. ;
Claude Ellis Davis, Jr.. Charlotte. N. C. ; Tenney
Inpalls Deane, Jr., Safety Harbor, Fla.
Fourth row: John William Denham, Winston-
Salem, N. C. ; Henry Buckner Dennis, Jr., Win-
.ston-Salem, N. C. ; Charles Bryan Dick.son, Mar-
ion, N. C. ; Tedrow William Dinpler, Miami, Fla.;
Thomas Sylvester Douplas. Win.ston-Salem, N. C. ;
Charles Beam Duncan, Spindale, N. C. ; Robert
Thomsen DuPuis, Richmond, Va.
Page Fifty-three
J
unior
D ^ A O P- ^
Y Wi ll
f... J
a p ^ a
r^, ^ ^
F/r.s/ nnr: Elmo Stephen Edwards, Spring
Hope, N. C; Walter Garland Edwards. Jr., Co-
lumbia, S. C. ; James Albert Ellis, Spindale, N. C. ;
Manfred Walter Emmrich, Charlotte, N. C. ; Paul
Neff Erckman, Atlanta, Ga. ; William Edmund
Etchison, Orlando, Fla. ; William Lee Ferguson,
York, S. C.
Second row: Russell William Ferrell, King.s-
port, Tenn. ; John Gardiner Richards Francis.
Camden, S. C; Paul Kruesi Frierson, Lookout
Mtn., Tenn. ; David Williamson Garvin. Chapel
Hill, N. C. ; Roy William Gilbert, Jr., Birmingham,
Ala. ; William Basil Goodson, Lincolnton, N. C. ;
Robert Andrew Gordon, Gastonia, N. C.
%*^J
Third ruir: William Richard tlrey. III. Ashe-
boro. N. C. ; Robert Tatum Groome, Asheville.
N. C. ; Benjamin Harte Harris, Jr., Mobile, Ala. ;
George Patrick Hender.son. Jr., Maxton, N. C;
James Henry Herlong, Rock Hill, S. C. ; Taylor
Mack Hill, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Robert Daw.son
Hoagland, Ft. Benning, Ga.
Fourth row: Richard Earl Hodel, Elkin, N. C.
David Martin Hollingsworth, Charlotte, N. C.
Charles Gordon Hollister, New Bern, N. C.
James Elmore Holmes, Jr., Memphis, Tenn.
Frank Stone Holt, Jr., Burlington, N. C. ; Clar-
ence Pope Huggins, Jr., King.stree, S. C. ; William
Martin Hull, Jr., Rock Hill, S. C.
Page Fifty-four
Class
C^ /^ <^ (^ Cj ^ o
Firfit row: William Marion Huntley. Charlotte,
N. C; Charles Marion James, Albemarle, N. C. ;
Thomas Jefferson, III, Richmond, Va. ; Archie
Telpher Johnson, Jr., Benson, N. C. ; Harold Pad-
prett Johnson, Davidson, N. C. ; John Sikes John-
ston, Charlotte. N. C. ; Melvin Charles Jones, De-
land. Fla.
Second row: Paul Brownlee Jones. Belmont, N.
C; Thad Elliott Kelly. Conway. S. C; Thomas
Edward Kernan, Richmond. Va. ; Millard Pierce
Kimball. Jr.. Orlando. Fla.; John Edwin Kim-
birl. Charlotte. N. C. ; Lunsford Richard.son Kintr,
Greensboro, N. C; Robert Herndon King, Ra-
leigh, N. C.
Third roir: Harold Leon Ki.stler, Mooresville,
N. C. ; Charles Augustus Kottmeier, Orlando, Fla. ;
John Wells Kuykendall, Charlotte, N. C. ; Byung
Kook Kwon, Taegu, Korea : Donald Beatty Lamm,
Wilson. N. C. ; Frederick Clark Landis. Front
Royal, Va.: Samuel Robert Lathan. Jr., Che.ster,
s. "c.
Fourth row: Arthur Peter Lawrence, Asheville,
N. C. : Edward Lloyd Lewis, Jr., Greensboro, Ga. ;
Vinton DeVane Lide, Greenville. S. C; Charles
Ivey Loftin, IH, Gastonia, N. C. ; David Edwin
Long, Tampa. Fla.; Eugene Monroe Long, IL Bur-
lington, N. C. ; Angus Murdoch McBryde, Jr.,
Durham, N. C.
Page FiftY-five
Junior
c <^ ^
Q 0 p n Q a a
t^^^n^dx^^k^k^^hdfM
First row: Thomas McConnell McCutchen, Jr.,
Florence, S. C. ; Calvin James McGehee, Jr., Char-
lotte, N. C. ; Samuel Henry McGirt, Jr., Monroe,
N. C. ; Octavus Jon McRae, Jr., Laurinburg, N.
C. ; Charles Darins Massey, Waxhaw, N. C. ; Lee
Maxwell Mayfield, Cairo, Ga. ; Joe O'Beirne Mil-
ner, Atlanta, Ga.
Second row: John Woodson Milstead, Jr., Rock-
ingham, N. C. ; Colon Shaw Mintz, Jr., Raleiph,
N. C; William Spencer Mitchem, Milton, Fla. ;
James Holt Moore, Rock Hill, S. C; Peter Ed-
ward Morrisett, Boiling: Springs, N. C. ; Atha
Thomas Jamison Morrison, Hartsville, S. C. ; Ells-
worth Neil Murry, Chevy Chase, Md.
Third row: Jacob Daniel Neubauer, III, Loui.s-
ville, Ky. ; William Gordon Neville, Jr., Atlanta,
Ga. ; John Arthur Nix, Tucker, Ga. ; Jerome Tal-
madge Norvell, Jr., Morganton, N. C. ; Walter
Herbert O'Briant, Concord, N. C. ; James Carney
Overall, Jr., Nashville, Tenn. ; William Neil Pad-
get, Jr., Marion. S. C.
Fourth row: Sherrill Vincent Parks, Statesville,
N. C. ; William Leon Patton, Jr., Brownsville,
Tenn. ; David Middleton Pearsall, Charlotte, N.
C. ; Howard Moses Persinger, Jr., Williamson, W.
Va. ; Jamie Samuel Peters, Richmond, Va. ; Carey
Owen Pickard, Jr., Macon, Ga. ; James Faulkner
Pinkney, Jr., Alexandria, Va.
Page Fifty-six
C hi s s
0 ©■ H- Gf^^M M
p. eti OP no
QB Q P 9 G©
Fn-.s'^ rair: John Samuel Poindexter, III, Sa-
vannah, Ga. ; James Thaddeus Poulson, Waynes-
boro, Va. ; William Kendrick Piirks, Jr., Vicks-
burpr. Miss. ; Georpe Wilson Ram.sey, Athens, Ga. :
Charles Harold Reajran, Richmond, Va. ; William
Andrews Reddinp, Asheboro, N. C. ; Adair Lyon
Reddoch. New Orleans, La.
Second roir: Charles Manprum Reed, Jr.,
Waynesville, N. C. ; Calvin Graham Reid. Char-
lotte, N. C. ; James William Reid, Jr., Thomas-
ville, Ga. ; John Franklin Renfro, Jr., Spartan-
burp, S. C. ; David Brauns Renter, Evanston. III. ;
Richard Warren Rieger, Jr.. Camden, S. C. ; Banks
Stacv RobinvSon, Gastonia, N. C.
Third voir: Dorus Paul Rudisili, Jr., Hickory,
N. C. ; Charles Lanpdon Rutherford, Jr., Mobile,
Ala. ; Henry Madi.son Samuels. Che.ster, S. C. ;
Walter Scott. Ill, Charlotte, \. C. : Malcolm Buie
Seawell, Jr., Lumberton. N. C. ; Harry Lee Shaw.
III. Larchmont, N. Y. ; Robert McBrayer Shoff-
ner. Raleigh, N. C.
Fourth roir: Burwell John Shore. III. Char-
lotte, N. C. ; Samuel Robin.son Sloan. Gastoaia,
N. C; Harvey Howard Smith, Charlotte. N. C. ;
Samuel Wilson Smith. Jr.. Charlotte, N. C. ; James
Allan Smyth, Blacksburp, Va. ; Alonzo Snel.son,
II. Wilkins. W. Va. ; Raymond Victor Spangler.
Jr.. Charlotte, N. C.
Page Fifty-seven
J
unior
^f^^ ^^W\ ^g^
(Tj u~< rj
Fn'sf ;-oH'; John Springs Stafford, Jr., Char-
lotte, N. C; John Thomas St. Clair, Jr., Charles-
ton, W. Va. ; Jim Lee Steele, Barium Springs, N.
C. ; Donald Underwood Stein, Jacksonville, Fla. ;
Peter Van Orden Sterling, Hingham, Mass.
Second roiv: Edward Ira Stevens, Syracuse, N.
Y. ; Douglas Wearn Stewart, Charlotte, N. C. ;
Fred Wimberly Streetman, Jr., Hendersonville,
N. C; George Helme Sutcliffe, Charlotte, N. C;
Carey Gordon Swaim, Jr., Lexington, N. C.
Third row: Melton Hill Tankersley, Montgom-
ery, Ala. ; Leslie Rogers Taylor, Wilmington, N.
C. ; Waller Littlepage Taylor, Jr., Virginia Beach,
Va. ; William Pace Terrell. College Park, Ga. ;
John Lampros Toumaras, Burlington, N. C.
Fourth roir: Ralph Rufus Triplette, Jr., Elkin,
N. C. ; Ward Landis Voigt, Greensboro, N. C. ;
William Laurens Walker, IIL Spartanburg, S. C. ;
Edwin Craig Wall, Jr., Conway, S. C. ; Larry
Edwin Walter, Calhoun, Ga.
Page Fifty-eight
Class
First roir: John Alexander Welsh. Ill, Chester-
field, S. C; William Hutson Wester, Henderson,
N. C. ; Harold Arthur Westervelt, Athens, Ga. ;
William Bruce WildtT. Kinpsport, Tenn.
Second roir: William Kdwin Wilkinson, Meh-
ane, N. C. ; James Johnson Williams. Yadkinville.
N. C. ; Edward Echoles Wilson, Jr., Charlotte,
N. C. ; Ralph Sloan Wilson, El Dorado, Ark.
Third row: William Warren Womble, Sanford,
N. C. : Richard Scott Woodman.se. Little Rock,
Ark.; Robert Webb Wynne. Ill, Raleiph, N. C. ;
P'elix Calvin Yarboro, Elkin, N. C.
Fourth roir: James Erne.st Yarbrouph, Jr..
Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Francis Lachicotte Zemp,
Camden, S. C.
Pa^e Fifty-nine
RiGGS
Robinson
Henry
Class
Tlif local flick- inicc (Uiaiii
offered keen ctmiiu tHimi In
Friiltui iii<ilit stiiiljiiHU.
"One rebiitt' shall not dishearten me. With the help of the
{rods I will enter the Thou>rhtery and learn myself. How can
all these fine distinctions, these subtleties be learned? Come,
show me what profit 1 shall Kain from it. It is with a pur-
I)ose that I jilay this idiot's i"ole."
— Aristophanes
The "idiot's role" iras often
manifested especiallij when
Freshmen failed to aucciimb
to it.
First row: Chester Alexander, Jr., Burlington, N. C;
James Frosst Alexander, Charlotte, N. C; William Sutton
Alexander, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Archie Gray Allen, Jr.,
Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Harold Francis Anderson, Waynes-
boro, Ga. ; Edward Millis Armf ield, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Third row: William Petei- Beckman, Hemingway, S. C;
Joseph Norment Bell. Norfolk, Va.; Charles Uunlap Ben-
son, Maitland, Fla.; Julius Marvin Bentley, Jr., Macon,
Ga.; Tristram Walker Bethea, Jr., Lancaster, S. C. ;
James Russell Black, Goldsboro, N. C.
Second ron' : James William David Atchison, Birmingham,
Ala.; Robert Livingston Avinger, Jr., Columbia, S. C;
William Warren Babcock, Lakeland, Fla.; Larry Wassoii
Baggett, Orlando, Fla.; Rol)ert Yates Baldwin, Lakeland,
Fla.; James Edwin Bear, IH, Richmond, Va.
Fourth row: James Goodwin Bloomfield, Wilkesboro, N. C. ;
Altamont Hart Bracey, South Hill, Va.; Joel Henry Bras-
well, Atlanta, Ga.; Charles Christopher Bremer, New Bern,
N. C; John Charles Bridgers, Rowland, N. C. ; John Wy-
bert Brooke, Jr., Montrose, N. V.
Fifth row: Harry Lee Broome, South Boston, Va.; Pleas-
ant Luther Brown, Jr., Ivanhoe, N. C; John Ashby Bry-
son, Asheville, N. C; Augustus Burgdorf, Springfield,
S. C; Darby Cannon, III, Lavonia, Ga.; William Henry
Carr, Durham, N. C.
Page Sixlylwo
Cla
ss
1
^ p p .^
. ■ fl^' }--' 'W' fwW
f^ ^ 1^1 o p
f'i;n( (Of; Louie Hankins CaiiiiiKt"". Uirhmuiid, Va.;
•lames Walton Cairuth, Jr., Red SpiiiiKs, N. t'.; Francis
Cameron Carter, Winston-Salem, N. C; .lack Caldwell
Carter, Atlanta, Ga. ; John Davis Cassada, Jr., Virtrinia
Beach, Va. ; Clinton Duncan Cater, Jr., Greensboro, N. C.
SiromI row: Walter DeFrost Clark, Greenville, S. C:
William Henry Cobb, Little Rock, Ark.; Ralph Donald
Coffey, Jr., MorKanton, N. C; Christopher King Cole,
Charlotte, N. C. ; Robert DeVane Croom, III, Maxton, N.
C. ; John Alexander Daniel, Shelbyville, Ky.
Thiiil nil-: I'errin Quarles Darpan, Jr., Spartanburg, S.
('.; Leslie Hill Davis. Charlotte, N. C; William Kearns
Davis, Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Robert Beattie Dixon, Jr.,
Greensboro, N. C; Donald Harris Dublin, Decatur, Ga.;
Joseph Daingerfield Dulaney, Monroe, N. C.
Fourth row: Marshall Campbell Dunaway, Atlanta, Ga.;
James Franklin Dusenberry, Jr., Laurens. S. C; James
Frederick Karnhardt, Thomasville, N. C: William Fox
Kckbeit, Jr., Cramerton, N. C; Leland Nicholas Kdmunds,
Jr., North Miami, Fla. ; Charles Anderson Engh, Alexan-
dria, Va.
Fifth row: Henry Merritt Escue, Jr., South Charleston,
W. Va.; Ronald Edward Falls, Louisville, Ky. ; William
Sidney Farabow, Charlotte, N. C.; Louis Henry Fogleman,
Jr., Wadesboro, N. C. ; James Ernest Fordham, Jr.. Win-
ston-Salem, N. C; Thomas .Archibald Fieeman, Jr.. Eliza-
bethton, Tenn.
/'age Sixty-lhree
Sophomore
^ *-
^ ^^^ k4^'* lev ^*^ W
k^J
Fi*s< you-: Eivin Wall Fuiiderbuik, Chei-aw, S. C. ; Jerry
Greene Gattis, Belmont, N. C; Milton Carlyle Gee, Jr.,
Greensboro, N. C; Graham Wiley George, Jr., Decatur,
Ga.; David Black Gillis, Jr., Mount Olive, N. C; John
Tilden Glenn, Owensboro, Ky.
Second row: Gregory Michael Grana, Valdese, N. C; De-
Witt Allen Green, jr., Winter Park, Fla.; John David
Grice, Stanley, N. C. ; Edwards Moseley Gwathmey, Jr.,
Spartanburg," S. C; John Buford Grier, Rock Hill, S. €.;
James Hamilton, Chester, S. C.
Third row: George Washington Hart, Charlotte. N. C;
Gary Heeseman, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Walter Lee Hefner,
Jr., Statesville, N. C; William Hellier, Jr., .Atlanta, Ga.;
Charles Henry Hetiderson. Noiton. Va.; Ted Morrow Hen-
ry, Selma, Ala.
Fourth row: Jerone Carson Herring, Snow Hill. N. C;
Victor Geiald Hill, Oklahoma City, Okla.; James Aren-
dell Hodges, Jr., Kinston. N. C. ; Roy Craig Hoffner,
Mocksville N. C; James Blanding Holman, Jr., Batesburg.
S. C; John Carlton Huie, Jr., .Albany, Cia.
Fifth row: Harold Richard Hunnicutt, Jr., Kings Moun-
tain, N. C; Ernest Woodrow Hunt, Jr., Daytona Beach,
Fla.; Thomas Dunlap Hunter, III, Hendersonville, N. C. ;
Marion Eugene Jernigan, Atlanta, Ga.; Robert Boyd Jones,
Richmond, Va.; Peter John Kellogg, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Page SixtyfoiiT
CI.
ISS
A n r^ ^' p
J5 C; a ^ .O D
%^ r ri c
J;i p o ct) ^
Flint row: David Carlisle Kennedy, Hinton, VV. Va.; .loliii
Ki'dniann Kepler, Staunton, Va.; Oscar Thomas Kerse>,
Jr., La Grange, (Ja. ; Donald Randall Killian, Mount Hollv,
N. C; Wilbur Kirl.y Kilpatriik, .Ir., Pembroke. N. C;
Sun^ Kyu Kim, Ridtreway, S. C.
Sicotid row: William Knox Kinlaw, Jr., Lumberton, N. C:
Harry Zahm I.andis, Jr., Memphis, Tenn.; Frederick Carl
Lane, Winston-Salem, N. C; James Speir Lawrence, La-
(JraiiKe. 111.: Edward Bennet LeMaster, Jr., Memphis,
Tenn.; Robert Edward Living-ston, Sebring, Fla.
Tliir,! raw: Harry Davidson Lloyd, Lakeland. Fla.; Wil-
liam John Lohman, Jr., Jack.sonville, Fla.; Julian Love,
tJreensboro, N. C; John Peterson Lund, Cireensboro, N. C. ;
Daniel Kenney McAlister, Maplewood, N. J.; David Sidney
McCarty, Jr., Mount Airy, N. C.
h'uiirth row: Robert Crittenden McClure, Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla.; David Legarde McCullough, Lincolnton, N. C; Noel
Bruce McDevitt, Chapel Hill, N. C. ; Robert Kennedy
.McGirt, Red Springs. N. C; .Alexander Ward McKeithen,
Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Colon Weisiger McLean, Jr., Wash-
ington. N. C.
Fifth roir : John Lawrence McNeill, Jr., Raeford, N. C. ;
.Alfred Farnuni .MacKay. Ocala. Fla.: Donald Miles Mac-
Queen, Clinton, N. C. ; William Edward Manning, Roan-
oke Rapids, N. C; Robert Heyerdale Martin, Louisville,
Ky. ; Madison Mauze, San .Antonio, Texas.
Page SiAi} five
Sophomore
o o Q g p Q
PjiVfek # ' "^^ ^^^ i^^i /^'^'^
C<^^BLa ^^^^k ^^^^\ ^■'''^'**^ (0^^^^
First row: Thomas McRee Maxwell, Quincy, Fla.; Larry
Keith Meyer, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Arthur Day Miller, III,
St. Petersburg, Fla.; Preston Dallas Miller, Jr., Norton,
Va.; Lawrence Edward Moore, Conway, S. C; William E.
Moore, Little Rock, Ark.
Second row: Southwood Jelks Morcock, Jr., Covington, Ga. ;
Frederick Hubbard Morris, IH, Kernersville, N. C; Robert
William Morrison, Jr., Columbia, S. C. ; David Edward
Mullen, Winter Park, Fla.; David William Nash, Little
Rock, Ark.; Albert Stuart Nickles, Jr., Hodges, S. C.
Third lotv: Frank Pelletier Norris, H, David.son, N. C;
Francis Leonard Nye, Conway, S. C; William Henry Ot-
ten, Derita, N. C. ; Kenneth Dale Owen, Charlotte, N. C;
James Thomas Owens, Mvrtle Beach, S. C. ; Robert Claude
Page, in, Charlotte, N. C.
Fourth roir : Edgardo Juan Pantigoso, Arequipa, Peru;
Charles Marvin Parker, LaGrange, Ga.; Robert Pate, Jr.,
Abingdon, Va.; James O'Hanlon Patterson, Jr., Roanoke,
Va.; Philip Wyatt Payne, Beckley, W. Va.; Russell Charles
Pease, Burlington, N. C.
Fifth row: Carroll Miller Pitts, Jr., Rock Hill, S. C;
Julian Mclver Pleasants, Southern Pines, N. C. ; Kenneth
Larry Pless, Kannapolis, N. C. ; John Randolph Poag, III,
Charlotte, N. C; Alpheus Alexander Porter, Jr., Char-
lotte, N. C; Harry Douglas Powell, Wallace, N. C.
Page Sixty-six
C hi s s
g piP n a CD.
J "5 o ^^^ p o o
First row: Thomas Baker Price, Florence, S. C. ; Claude
Oliver F'roctor, Jr., Ahoskie, N. ('.; Scott Collisoti Puckett,
Conway, S. C. ; Newton Gaston Quantz, .Jr., Rock Hill,
S. C; Henry Klrod Ramsey, Atlanta, Ga.; Helton Craij;
Ray, Jr., Moultrie, Ga.
Second row: James Henderson Reynolds, Rutherfordton,
N. C. ; William Lawrence Reynolds, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. ;
Donald Wallace Rhame, Clinton, S. C.: George Nel.son
Rhyiie, Mount Holly, N. C.; Charles Franklin Rich, Jr.,
Asheville, N. C. ; Frederick Richards, II, Charleston, S. C.
Tliiril mil-: William James Richards, Jr., Concord, N. C;
(ierald Kdmund Richmond, Columbia, S. C. ; Thomas Eu-
gene Ridenhour, Concord, N. C. ; Lamar Williamson Rii^gs,
Little Rock, Ark.; Charles Davenport Roberts, III, Atlanta,
Cla.; David Wallace Robinson, Jr., Columbia, S. C.
Fourth row: Richmond Williston Rucker, Winston-Salem,
N. C; Albert Case Rupgles, Kinjisport, Tenn.; Truman
Grove Rumber(;er, Jr., .\lexandria, Va.; Lash Gaither
Sanford, Jr., Mocksville. N. C; Clinton McCraw Schaum,
Ji-., Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Warren Devereaux Scheerer,
Spartanburi;, S. C.
Fifth row: John Rhodes Scott, Lancaster, Pa.; Philip Au-
gustus Shive, Scotts, N. C. ; Richard Carper Smith, Jack-
sonville, Fla.; Thomas Earle Smith, Jr., LaurinburK, N. C;
Gordon Lash Spaugh, Winston-Salem, \. C; Thomas Ken-
dall Spencer, Jr., Lillington, N. C.
Pane Sixly-ieven
Sophomore
First row: Herbert Edward Spivey, Mt. Gilead, N. C. ;
William Alfred Stanton, III, Leland, Miss.; Jere Pelletier
Starling, Hubert, N. C; Edward Lester Stewart, Jr.,
Kingsport, Tenn.; John Curtis Stone, Marianna, Fla.
Second row: Edward Robert Street, Charlotte, N. C;
Walker Dabney Stuart, III, Richmond, Va. ; James Camp-
bell Taylor, San Antonio, Tex. ; William Alexander Thomp-
son, Andalusia, Ala.; Wallace Michael Thrower, Memphis,
Tenn.
Third row: Charles Brownfield Thurman, Atlanta, Ga.;
Bruce Whitmore Van Sant, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Joseph
Armand Verreault, III, Valdese, N. C; Otis Sumter Warr,
III, Memphis, Tenn.; John Little Watwood, Childersburg,
Ala.
Page Sixty-eight
Ch
iss
M^^SW..
l££M
0 a Q p
Firgl row: Joseph Henry Wearn, Charlotte, N. C; William
Jackson Welhorn, Jr., Trion, Ga.; Lawrence Knox Wells,
McConnells, S. C. ; John Heath West, Piedmont, Ala.;
Stephen Alexander Whi|e, Jr., Mebane, N. C.
Srrnvrl rov : William Rli Whitesell, Galax, Va.; Donald
Phillip Whitley, Hickory, N. C; James William Whitlow.
Mt. Mourne, N. C; Forrest Craig Wilkerson, Rock Hill,
S. C; Sidney James Williams, Jr., Living^ston, Ala.
Third row: John Derrick Wilsey, Reynolda, N. C; Roherl
Anderson Wilson, Lowell, N. C.; Richard Page Wilson,
Ridgeway, Va.; Thomas Perrin Wright, Jr., Radford, Va.;
Samuel Riley Zimmerman, IH, Greenville, S. C.
Page Sixty-nine
Freshman
Freshman Adviser Bill Fraley
Ch
ISS
Oner a<fni>i tin- Cnliv Jiacr ii'ns
to inodiicf a cross count iji
clHinip.
iV.JV^-i'*'?^''*-'''^*'
"Xdl I :iiii nut I'l'iiitc IlaniK't. nor was meant to be;
Am an attciulaiil lord, one that will do
To swell a progress, start a scene or two.
Advise the prince; no doubt, an ea.sy tool.
Deferential, glad to be of use.
Politic, cautious, and meticulous ;
Full of hijrh sentence, but a bit obtuse;
At times, indeed, almost ridiculous —
I should have i)een a i)air of rapped claws
Scuttlinp across the floors of silent seas."
— T. S. Eliot
"This iras their finest hour"
. . . as the Frosh triumphed
in the annual Fresh man-Soph-
nniorr Field Day.
(!^ r!) p
O p P '^i
1^ ^ (f^ r^
0 n Cs
Freshman
4
Richard Millikan Aderhold, Greensboro, N. C.
George Andrew Agett, Kingsport, Tenn.
David Max Alabran, Kannapolis, N. C.
Charles David Alexander, III, Kannapolis, N. C.
Andrew Smart Allan, III, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
James Lathan Allen, Chester, S. C.
Marvin Leroy Allen, Mount Holly, N. C.
William Robeson Allen, III, Wilmington, N. C.
James Thomas Anderson, Alexandria, Va.
William Bacon Armstrong, High Point, N. C.
Clyde Watts Auman, West End, N. C.
Hugh Jackson Barger, Jr., Davidson, N. C.
James Thcmas Bai'nett, Jr., Miami, Fla.
Francis Hutton Barron, Eufaula, Ala.
Roger Orvis Beebe, Atlanta, Ga.
Marvin Butler Bennett, Jr., Greensboro, N. C.
Benjamin Land Bivins, Macon, Ga.
Herbert Andrew Blake, Anderson, S. C.^
Robert Adams Blake. Abbeville, S. C.
George Robert Blalock, Jr., Clinton, S. C.
William Michael Bolt, Charlotte, N. C.
James Childs Bootle, Macon, Ga.
Fred Baxter Boozer, Flemington, Ga.
John Thomas Bowden, Manchester, Ga.
James Richard Bownes, Dumont, N. J.
Quinton Pressley Boyd, Porterdale, Ga.
Thomas N. C. Bruns, Jr., New Orleans, La.
Jefferson Haywood Bruton, Hamlet, N. C.
James Otis Burke, Jr., Lexington, N. C.
Harold Ned Bynum, Iron Station, N. C.
William Howard Cannon, Guilford College, N. C.
Marlborough Peques Carroll, Shelby, N. C.
Heniy Homer Chase, Jr., Huntsville, Ala.
James Craig Clark, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
Daniel Orr Clemmer, Jr., Benton, Tenn.
Jerry Lea Cole, Yanceyville. N. C.
Foirest Warren Collins, Jr., Shelby, N. C.
Thomas Bethel Colvin, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Robert Leonidus Cook, Jr., Salisbury, N. C.
(Juinton Edwin Cooke, Jr., Murfreesboro, N. C.
Page Seventy-two
Class
John Hh.v CmiU-.v. Hlark Moimtnin, N. C.
Charles I.HDdrum Cun\woll, I.iittimorc, N. C.
(lordon I.ee Cory, (•reeiislM)ro, N. C.
Solon Russell Cotton. Jr., Red Springs, N. ('.
ThoniHs Leak ('oviiiifti>i\, Jr., Kuckintrham, N. •'
Jo.seph Miiharl C.ix. .Mullins, S. C.
David Krnost CrniK. (Ircensboro, N. C.
William Chapman Crawford, Jr., Salisbury, N. C,
William .Malcolm Crouch, Jr., Hart.sville, S. C.
John Man^on Webb Crutc, Jr., Wilson, N. C.
John Henry Dailey, Acme, N. C.
John Sanders Dallas, Jr., Hiph Point, N. C.
Richard Laurence Dalton, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Paul Wanedna Davis, III, Piney Flats, N. C.
Robert Dorsey Davis, Jr., Hi(rh Point, N. C.
William Franklin Deane, Safety Harbor, Fla.
Robert Dayton Denham, Winston-Salem, N. C.
John Parker Denton. Somerset, Ky.
Claude Veazey DeShazo, Jr., O.xford, Miss.
John Oliver DeVries, IV, Asheboro, N. C.
RoRer Edward Dewhurst, Miami Springs, Fla.
.■\lvin Johnston Dickens, Jr., Morpranton, N. C.
Richard Lee Dixon, Gastonia, N. C.
Eugrene Hamilton Driver, Jr., Thomasville, Ga.
James Walter Duff, Jr., Hendersonville, N. C.
Ervin Stanley Duggan, Manning, S. C.
David Nesbit Edwards, Winston-Salem, N. i
Joseph Donald Eifort, We.st End, N. C.
Hansford Muse Epes, Jr., Lynchburg, Va.
Joseph Webb Farrar, Mount Holly, N'. C.
William Tyree Finch, Georgetown, Tex.
Claude Swanson Finney, Jr., Spartanburg, S. C.
James Kurtland Fleagle, Reidsville, N. C.
Albert Lee Flintom, Toccoa, Ga.
Donald Follmer, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
George DeSaussure Gabel, Jr., Jacksonville, Fla.
Stanley Francis Gaines, Jr., Boyle, Miss.
Robert Marion Gant, Jr., St. Louis, Mo.
Edwin Burke Garrett, Jr., Brevard, X. C.
William Earle Gayle, Jr., Huntington, W. Va.
^ o ft m p
r:^ O ^ r
ft r^ ^ O-
cx {T^ c: r. o
pi O P f^ O
h- P ^ O f> '
Page Serentythrec
Freshman
o (f^i r*> rs
/^^ ^SSBlk f^^S
^^^ <S^»S&!k, ^^\
f^ C4 p ^
r '^ '" '^ Qi
Henry Pierce Goodwin, Jr., Greenville, S. C.
James Robert Gordon, Hamlet, N. C.
Frank Alexander Gould, Jr., Richmond, Va.
Ralph Peery Grant, Jr., Kingsport, Tenn.
William Michael Grant, Blacksburu', Va.
Vardell Gaines Grantham, Jr., Fairmont, N. C.
William Allan Gravely, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
Robert Sater Green, Winter Park, Fla.
John Wayne Greene, Huntersville, N. C.
William Alexander Greene, Whiteville, N. C.
Edward Owings Guerrant, Winchester, Ky.
William Carruthers Hagan, Jr., Kingsport, Tenn.
Edwin Piatt Hall, Alexandria, Va.
Robert Davidson Hall, Jr., Belmont, N. C.
Charles Daniel Hamner, III, Lynchburg, Va.
John D. Hardman, Jacksonville, Fla.
Clarence Leonard Hardy, Kinston, N. C.
Donald Wilson Harper, Rock Hill, S. C.
Charles Hewitt Harrill, Jr., Lincolnton, N. C.
Elwood Franklin Hartman, Jr., Greensboro, N. C.
Lucius Herman Harvin, III. Henderson, N. C.
Alexander C. Hattaway, III, Greensboro, N. C.
William Kinibro Hedrick, Warren, Ark.
Robert McLeod Henderson, Maxton, N. C.
John Arthur Hendry, Perry, Fla.
James Garrison Hill, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Finley Clarke Holmes, Memphis, Tenn.
Linton Cooke Hopkins, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.
Daniel Charles House, Henderson, N. C,
Earl Edward Houser, Charlotte, N. C.
Thomas Mangus Hudgins, Greensboro, N. C.
John McKee Huling, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Charles Richard Hunter, Jr., Blenheim, S. C.
Walker Fitch Hunter, Hilton, N. Y.
David Alexander Irvin, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Nicholas Andrew Ivanoff, .Arlington, Va.
Edward Lon Jackson, Jacksonville, Fla.
Emmett Jerome Jacques, Mooresville, N. C.
Robert Ervin James, Jr., Darlington, S. C.
(ieorge Walter Johnson, III, Orlando, Fla.
Page Seventy-four
Ch
iss
Kclwaid Kriinklin Johnston, Jr., Walliu-f, N. C
Roliort l.t>»> Joiu's, Jr., Aslu-txiro, N. I'.
John Kdwnrci Koiter, Kin.-iton, N. ('.
Alhert Menr.v Kt'lli-r, Jr., HirniinK'liniii. .Ma.
Ct'or^i' (irii'i Kirkpiiti ii-k, .Ir., Ciiinovillc, l''|ji
liolii'rt Kdward KiziT, Jr., Ashclioid, N. C.
Cruhani Cordon I.aoy, .Ir., Wa.shintrton, D. C.
Kenneth Michael I.aUKhlin, Charhitte, N. C.
Cordon Buck LeCrand, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Arthur Ervin Lesesne, Creenville, S. C.
William .Matthews I.on^. Jr., Mocksville, N. C.
Huph .Mexander McAllister, Jr., Lumherton, N. C.
Albert H. McChire, Jr., Barium .'Springs-, N. C.
John Timothy McCorkle, Bristol, Va.
Henry Christian McFadyen, Jr., I.enoii, X. C.
Bobliy Watson Mclntyre, Spartanburjr, S. C.
Ralph Malloy McKeithen, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Millon Murray Mcl.cndon, Jr, Lake City. S. C.
Donald Drake McNeill, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
David Xorris MacKinnon, (Jrecnville, Ala.
Spiro James Macris, Wilniinjrton.. N. C.
Thomas Foy Mainor, Miami. Fla.
Joseph Eldridpe Markee, Jr., Durham, N. C.
William Clifford Martin, III, Lonjrview, Tex.
Edgar Booth Marston, III, Kinston, N. C.
John Steven Maxwell, Fort Laudeidale. Fla.
Harrison May. Staunton, Va.
David Russell Maynard, Los Altos, Calif.
Lewis Belton Metts, Jr., York, S. C.
Raymrnd Ault Miller, .Abnt'don, \'s.
Wallace Belle Millner, III. Concord, N. C.
Robert Letcher .Moore, II, Harrisonburg Va.
John Malcolm .Muichiton, Jr., Concord, N. C.
Hugh Crattan Murray, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
Richard P^dwin Nash, Winston-Selcm. N. C.
Henry Whitehead Neale, Tampa, Fla.
Charles Randall Nelms, Jr., Kinjr^port, Tenn.
Broxie Jay Nelson, Chester, S. C.
Edward Carl Niven, Charlotte, N. C.
Guy Nelson Nix, Jr., Jacksonville, Fla.
p p. (f:i C5
p '■^ rN p.
Q O (T\ fpi C^-
^ P |?3 r^ -fT^
p <*> 1^ p (*^
P P O n *?5
Page Sei-eitty-fix'e
o o o
Freshman
n <^ o
^ C5 0
Lt/
p p .p, o p
^. ft ^ p p
James Garland Nuckolls, Jr., Galax, Va.
Douglas Milton Orr, Jr., Greensboro, N. C.
Howard Roger Pancoast, Jr., High Point, N. C.
Thomas Parker, Jr., Greenville, S. C.
Charles Whiting Patterson, III, High Point, N. C.
Mack Allen Paul, III, Aurora, N. C.
William Frederick Pharr, Bramwell, W. Va.
Walter Thompson Pharr, Cherryville, N. C.
Samuel Henry Pope, III, Atlanta, Ga.
Joseph Hubert Powell, Jr., San Antonio, Tex.
Peter Johnson Powell, Little Rock, Ark.
John Franklin Prince, Dallas, Tex.
Paul Douglass Purington, Greenville, Tenn.
.Albert Theodore Quantz, Jr., Timmonsville, S. C.
Ronald Reginald Radford, St. Augustine, Fla.
Joseph Donald Randolph, Jr., Greenville, S. C.
James Edward Ratchford, Jr., Charlotte. N. C.
Timothy Britt Ray, Atlanta, Ga.
Hight Stinson Redmon, Morganton, N. C.
George Fulton Reeves, Jr., Jackson, Miss.
James Thomas Richardson, Gainesville, Ga.
John Addison Ricks, III, Roanoke, Va.
Samuel Gayle Riley, III, Raleigh, N. C.
Charles Lester Ringe, III, Blairstown, X. J.
Henry Clay Robertson, III, Charleston, S. C.
Robert David Robinson, Raleigh, N. C.
Larry Arch Rogers, Charlotte, N. C.
Charles Grandison Rose, III, Fayetteville, N. C.
Jack Irving Rose, II, Greenville, S. C.
Charles Eugene Rowe, Jr., Danville, Va.
John Isaac Rucker, Jr., Greensboro, N. C.
William Carl Rustin, Jr., Gastonia. N. C.
Robert Bradford Sargent, Charlotte, N. C.
Robert Harry Schacter. Indianapolis, Ind.
William Edward Shinn, Jr., Raleigh, N. C.
Kelly Ford Shippey, Jr., Columbia, S. C.
Henry Greyson Shue, Staunton, Va.
Thomas Edward Simpson, Jr., Richburg, S.
Harry Franklin Smith, Charlotte, N. C.
James Clarence Smith, Martinsville, Va.
Larry Hamilton Smith, Charlotte, N. C.
Poge Seventy-six
Ch
iss
Kii-hurd KintcKley Smith, Reform, Alu.
CharU'.s Jfiiniii^H Snider, Winston-Sulem, N. C.
Ovid lU'iijamin Sparks, Atlanta, tia.
Koy I.ee Stanley, Thoinasville, .N. ('.
Veriier Kii»:i-iif Stanley, .)r., Cluii U.tle, N. ('.
Lewis MiKinney Steele, Jr., Nashville, Tenn.
Kenneth Otto Stettler, Jr., Huntinjfton, W. Va.
Donald Charles Stowell, Jr., Jaiksonville, Fla.
John Wallace Talhert. Jr., Hartsville, S. C.
Harold Beecher Taylor, Jr., Albany, Cia.
Jack Borden Taylor, Sniithfield, N. C.
Walter Franklin Taylor, Jr., Colunihia, S. C.
Raymond Drake Thomas, Klack Mountain, N. C.
(ilenn Charles Thomason, Salishury, N. C.
Clifford Mel.eese Thompson, Lake City, Fla.
Jon Louis Thompson, Jacksonville, Fla.
Robert Livinjrston Thompson, Charlotte, N. C.
Daniel Wesley Turner, Plant City, Fla.
Oscar Kutfene I'tsman, Barium Springs, N. C.
Thomas Montgomery Van Ness, Dunellon, Fla.
Jerry Eugene Vaughan, Charlotte, N. C.
William Frank Wade, Jr., Black Mountain, N. C.
William Joseph Ward, Harrisonburg, Va.
Thomas Sumter Watts, Taylorsville, N. C.
Cleveland Gray Webber, Jr., Charlottesville, Va.
David Hunt Webster, Greenville, S. C.
John Wesley Weeks, Charleston, S. C.
Fontaine Allen Wells, Jr., Charlottesville, Va.
Arthur Pitts Werts, IM, Charlotte, N. C.
Ralph Norman Wesley, Jr., Charlotte, N. C.
Guyon Kugene Whitten, Jr., Thomasville, N. C.
Samuel S. Wiley, Jr., Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
Francis Smith Wilkin.son, Jr., Rocky Mount, N. C.
David Reaves Wilson, Mt. Olive, N. C.
Michael Meek Wilson, Anderson, S. C.
Robert Livingston Winsor, Chatham, N. J.
John Hubert Womeldorf, Waynesville, Va.
Francis Lewis Wyche, Jr., Petersburg, Va.
Moffatt Hardeman Wylie, Jr., Augusta, Ga.
Charles Lloyd Wyrick, Jr., Greensboro, N. C. * ^I ' \ ^ %»> W \^-_ f
Robert Croft Young, Atlanta, Ga. ^ ~ ^ "^^ * \r ' y \
c n n r c
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P f? A 9 iP P
Page Seventy seven
"Btisiiiess ivas his aversion:
Ph
easiire was
his h
msiness
-Maria Edgeworth
Activities
Strengflieried irith liopc and
fortified with zeal, the RED
AND BLACK once again began
ivork ON a neir production.
Night riders delivered each FRIDAY'S CHAPTER.
The kIoss of Rush Week had hardly faded before
the multiple demands of an extracurricular en-
vironment dictated the proper use of each day.
Dilettantes pursued their petty interests with eyes
set toward the space beneath their senior picture.
A few students actually convinced themselves that
they were accomplishing something, but others
were not quite so certain. The Red and Black
Masquers, beseijjed by lack of interest in the fall,
bounced back to give a flawless performance.
Other organizations, not able to recover so easily
from student disinterest, passed by the wayside.
No longer were idealistic .students cloistered
away from the realities of life. Local journalists
dedicated themselves to informing everyone in
weekly installments that John C. Calhoun had
come forth from a century of dust, dragging his
Eisenhower-nailed cofRn behind him. Night riders
delivered each Friday's chapter, and the public
eagerly awaited the new adventures of their hero.
Wllh the (ipin-oach of .'spring, the MALE CHORUS' VISIONS of fur off
htnd.s and field.'; .soo/; became a reality.
A larjrL' jjiimp oiicf iiK»iii tiinu'd out \vhri\
tht' Rfd Cross miidf its lu'riotlic iipiu-al. The
usual jri"i|H's al>out "$2.') \h'V pint" wori' lu-anl,
l)ut still tlu' l)a\ idsoniaiis lolk'd up tlu-ir
sleeves ai\d were priiked by the friendly
ruirses.
Sriii>ts 'n I'niiiLs justiCied its existence for
the first time in anyone's memory. Tlie "maR-
jrotzine" pointedly satirized everything in
sijrht. The audience seemed to enj*»y the criti-
cism, hut it maintained its petty air of
pseudo-sophistication.
Even an occasional l)it of cultuie pi-ni'-
trated the shell of the .sophisticated gentle-
men. This was manifested in several ways.
Some visited tlie M AND M and White's
DruK Store in order to l)uy their enliKhten-
ment. Others made regular trii)s to Charlotte
to the plays and symphonies. The Artist
Series offered a wide selection for the local
Philistine appetite. It was probably the best
selection of artists since we had been here.
A few were surprised to learn what chamber
music was. It had nothing what.soever to do
with either chambermaiils or chamberpots!
Ah-h-h Culture!
th, rSCAL GRIPKS about $2.', per pint.
A-h-h CULTVRK . . .
seeking a clarificaHou of "UNDER THE INFLUENCE."
The Student Council debated throughout the
year on several vital issues. Particularly, the mem-
bers tried to represent the views of the students
who had elected them. However, the practical and
realistic proposals which they advanced were
often quite opposed by the more idealistic mind
of the faculty. While the two groups conflicted
in a stalemate of theory, the ones who were per-
sonally concerned solved the issue for themselves
just outside the city limits. The Council accom-
plished quite a lot in other areas, however ; and
the student body had reason to be proud of their
representatives as they looked to the spring elec-
tions.
Radio Free Davidson created a stir during the
first semester, but its free voice grew silent as
the "Skull" began to quiver. Monastic purity tri-
umphed again, and Davidson retained its distinc-
tion of being "a safe place to send your son —
removed twenty miles from the nearest source
of sin." Hm-m-m.
Visits in the faculty homes on Sunday evening
seemed to gain new appreciation among the stu-
dents. Those who availed themselves of the op-
portunity of this personal contact acquired a deep-
er understanding and a closer friendship with
the professors and their families. There was not
a noticeable increase in actual visits, but the occa-
sions were more highly regarded than they had
been previously. The informal atmosphere was
appealing, and everyone profited from the expe-
i-ience.
. . a tnure higJihj regarded uecasion.
re in file leildcrnesfi.
. . . lu, KASY ASSIMII.ATIOS
iiitii till ciilliiii I iiriniiiiiii lit . . .
Almost everyone was pleased to notice the ease
with which the Freshmen were assimilated into
the college environment. The Freshman Council
was particularly effective in aiding the transition,
and they jri'thered quite an appreciative audience
on Freshmen Parents' Day.
Yet an occasional incident of recalcitrance and
a compelling desire to display one's immaturity
excited first-year passions. The Court of Control,
however, administered a well-defined policy, and
"Freshmania" was adequately curljed.
Studies often interfered with all the.se extra-
curricular activities, hut the Davidson ColleRe
value pattern maintained a proper perspective.
lest the studies become the central cause of the
in.stitution's existence.
The lUue Room and the Green Room opened
to different Ki'oups every nijrht as the student or-
jrani/.ations fretted away hour after hour rather
than surrender their membership to studies.
Admittedly these activities were sometimes di-
verting, but they did provide a practical means of
education which was acquired outside the labo-
ratory and classroom. Throuph presenting- oppor-
tunities for embryonic leadership coupled with an
atmosphere of learning. Davidson Collejre was
continuing to make a siKnificant contriijution to
the world.
//( / (//' Dcrdsi-iii'il imidnit cf "FnFJSHMAXIA.
Ross Smyth
President of the Stndent Bodti
Student Government
OFFICERS
Rcss Smyth _ _ Pri!<i(lciil
Tom Cutting First Vice-PfcsideHt
John Kuykendall Second Vice-President
Uabney Stuart Secretary-Treasurer
Student Government at Davidson College for
the school year 1957-1958 perhaps departed from
the norm in respect to its awareness of its weak-
nesses, but definitely remained mired in the usual
manner of acting restrictedly and inconclusively.
It continued, however, to centralize the total stu-
dent body activity, and to offer the student body
as a whole and the student as an individual an op-
portunity to govern himself and his school life.
The matter receiving the most attention during
the year was the question of interpretation and
modification of the drinking rule. The attitude of
the faculty and administration and the contrast-
ing practice of the student body in general set the
council in a conflicting position in regard to any
attempt at solution of the problem.
The council's activity, in addition to the ever-
present difficulties presented by the attitudes
toward alcoholic consumption, consisted of in-
creased participation in National Student Asso-
ciation affairs, attempts at certain changes in the
calendar, and some inter-college exchange of ideas.
Bernhardt Bondurant Bright Cutting Ferguson Fraley Gilbert
Kuykendall Livingston Robinson Rutherford Stuart Woodward
CI), f-W' ^^ l^: .wJ l-^J-
Smyth, I)aknky
The real purpose of the council continued to
be the uphoidinjr of the Honor System, the core
of Davidson life. In this realm dili>rent and sus-
tained effort was made in judicial proceedings to
maintain the standard of justice needed to
strenjrthen the Honor System. The unique secrecy,
which surrounds by necessity the circumstances
and experience of trial procedure, helped to ob-
scure to the jreneral viewer's eye the essential
work done by the council. I)elil)eration and dis-
cussion of situations vital to the future of in-
volved students were remarkably wide in perspec-
tive— a factor which contributed to both clarity
in exposition and ditliculty in decision.
In general summary it can be .said that becau.se
(if the efforts of tho.se wiilinK to bear the added
load of resi)onsil)ility demanded by a jwsition on
the council, there existed a genuine essentiality
and purpo.se within the council as a troverninn
body. As in the case of mo.st governments, there
was ample jrround for criticism and obvious op-
portunity for improvement; but there also ex-
isted as well, the fact that the body performed
necessary and beneficial functions to the collepe
as a whole.
. . . there existed a
(jcmiine essetitialUij
and purpose irithin
the council.
Young Men's Christian Association
Worship, Study, Action — these words charac-
terize the YMCA. A campus centered organization
responsive to the needs of the college community,
the "Y" gives students the opportunity to explore
the meaning of the Christian faith and its in-
sights into problems that college men face.
Three years of voluntary membership, the
growth of denominational fellowships, and a lack
of movement consciousness called for a careful
examination of the nature of a campus Christian
association. The result was an intensive study of
YMCA methods, materials, personnel, and pro-
grams.
After making preliminary plans at the fall re-
treat, the Cabinet heard Al Payne, regional secre-
tary, and Dr. George Abernethy, president of
Lloyd Chapin
President of the YMCA
George Staples
Minister to the Students
Cabinet Members: Gerald Wilson, Vernon Broyles, Dick Smith, David Robinson, Jim
Richai-ds, Willie Thompson, Dave Holling&worth, Barry Benton, Bob MacRae, John
McVay, Tom Smith, Bob Livingston, Lloyd Chapin.
Thf lioiird of Directors, discuss vurious problems.
The cabinet coiuluctetl its own study of "Y" his-
tory, organization, and publications. These efforts
jrave promise of a l)etter understanding' of the
collejre "Y" and a stronjrer relijrious life for
Davidson Students.
A si}rnilicanf forward step was taken toward
informinir students of "Y" activities with the in-
aujrm"ation of Tin Stiithiit-Christiaii, a monthl.v
newsletter which also offered editorial comment
on cam()us affairs. Other innovations were the
extension of Hoy's \\'ori< into afternoon activities
for trnide school children and .student di.scussion
jrroups held in faculty homes.
Christmas vespers and the Universal Day of
Prayer for Students were memorable occasions.
The Davidson Community Center was the scene
of weekly fellowship and worship. The orienta-
tion dance at Queens, e.xchanjre dates, and after
dance parties provided entertainment and recre-
ation. Exam chapels offered quiet moments in
midst of emotional and mental pressures.
A younp cabinet, including six .sophomores and
four juniors, worked enthusia.stically at their
po.sts. Nine months of careful job analysis and
intense effort resulted in tangible advancements
in every area and pointed to a stron^^er, more dy-
namic "Y."
Winter Services acre but an cxaniph of the
Y's invaluable contribution to campus life.
Board of Directors: George L. Abernethy, Georjre Staples, .John Bevan, A. L. Payne,
John C. Bailey, Charles E. Ratliff, Lloyd W. Chapin, Robert E. Livinpston, W. I.aurens
Walker. David \V. Robinson, J. O. Gant.
Reserve Officers' Training Corps
Lt. Col. William L. Adams
Pi-dfcsfioy of Military Scioicc ruid Tactics
Charles Theodore Stowe
Cadet Rcgi)ncntal Co)ii)iia)idcr
The Davidson ROTC Regiment was one of the
first such units in the nation to turn over operative
functions to the cadet officers and staffs. Four
years ago student responsibility was extended to
the issuing of arms, the paying of cadets, and the
grading of cadet drill performance. Supplying,
administering, publicizing, and field training were
conducted by the senior cadets in order to give
them every possible opportunity to learn by doing.
Classroom in.struction and advice came from the
cadre which this year included four new officers:
Capt. Lonnie Lumston, Capt. John Mitchell, First
Lt. Thomas Brooks, and Lt. Col. William Adams,
P.M.S.&T.
This year, for the first time, regulation army
uniforms could be purchased by MS III and MS
IV cadets through special arrangement with the
college. These uniforms can be used by graduated
cadets while on active duty. Swagger sticks and
a Davidson College Crest added distinctiveness
to these outfits, which drew praise from Col.
A sharp appearing Color Guard
led tJir rcfiimrvf on parade.
Regimental Staff: Stowe, Smyth, Payne, Johnson,
Maynard, Forrester.
"/ iiKlirctiini iiriiiK," uud siid-
il I III II It tirinf/ drill in over.
Kiethly. Chief of the North Carolina Military
District. The red, black, and jrold metal crest was
desijrned by a committee of cadets last year.
Davidson was distinctive at summer camp for
having such a cre.st.
At the cam)), which was held at Fort BrajjK,
North Carolina, the regiment's repre.sentatives
added di.stinction to their record by placing third
in rifle competition in which eighteen educational
institutions were entered. Davidson also had more
men housed as Colonel's orderlies than any other
school.
Durinjr the .second .semester this year, repre-
.sentatives of the corps traveled to other .schools
in an effort to learn more about similar units.
In this way, ideas were exchanged on mi'thods
of effective operating procedures.
Major changes were made in the >rradinK sys-
tem in order to make drill field performance an
element in the .student's over all .standinji- For
the fir.st time, .student efliciency reports and in-
structor evaluation were entered as part of the
cadet's numerical jrrade.
iijpvs uj iCfa/joiifi.
Company Commandkhs: Md.ain, HemiiiKway, Wood, Bassctt, Price, Powell.
5 ^^ "t
The band provided both cadence and
moral support for the marching many.
Cadet >i sodii learned the nieaninij of
doing things the army way.
R. O. T. C
AmoiiK other innovations of the year were
the organizing of a battle group and the es-
tablishing of the position of supply sergeants.
The change to the battle group came after federal
inspection and was part of the Army's plan of
complete reorganization, which disposes of regi-
ments and battalions as units. In making the
change, the department laid the groundwork for
next year by ironing out the difficulties involved
in transition. Two substrength battle groups were
formed, thus creating more positions for the
training of officer personnel. This switch came
at a time in which it was most needed because the
junior class had a greater proportion of members
participating in ROTC than any other class in
recent years.
The supply sergeants were in charge of logistic
work and weapons at the company level. As part
of the corps special emphasis on education in logi.s-
tic processes and responsibilities, these sergeants
spent extra time each week working in the sup-
ply department.
In October, Dr. William J. Martin presented
to the unit the flag which had covered the casket
Office u-(>)-k ii-ns an in!j)i>rt(nit cdiit ribiitor to the
smooth coordination of the entire regiment.
. . . "Iiainid kilhrs" at
"hiilini/ (/ii Hfck."
of his son William .Ir.. class of TiT. who was killod
in an auto accident wliilo on active duty. Bill had
formorly served as intelligence otlicer in the
Davidson refjiment. The William J. Martin Jr.
Memorial F'lajr was desifrnated to be flown on two
special occasions — federal inspection and com-
mencement. A William J. Martin Jr. Medal was
also friven to perpetuate the memory of the lieu-
tenant. This honor, to be jriven annually to the
outstandint? company commander, was presented
for the first time at the 195S .Awards Day.
Eleven Di.stinjruished Military Students were
(lesijrnated by the ROT(" Department and were
oflicially recognized in a siirinjr parade. Alto-
gether, forty-four graduating seniors were com-
missioned in ten different branches of the army.
This year .saw a new high in the ever rising
ROTC Department at Davidson.
The HoiKir Platoon . . . ri'tircHvntiiKj the
Davicl.sou liOTC Depart nictit at all local pa-
rades and festivities.
■I .;;:
/j'';''H'l'iiA
Rifle inspection iras a
tense moment that feu-
relished n-ith enthu-
siasm.
Court of Control
The Court of Control was founded in 1920 for
the purpose of investigating and acting upon
charges made by upperclassmen against recalci-
trant Freshmen. The various indictments con-
sisted of such things as violation of hallowed
Davidson traditions, breaches of the Freshmen
Regulations, and the demonstration of attitudes
generally improper for Freshmen.
Contrary to popular belief, the Court was more
than a mere disciplinary body. The Davidson Tri-
bunal asserted as its primary function an honest
ambition to help the Freshmen in their adjust-
ment to college life. Recognizing the drastic
changes confronting the former high school sen-
iors, the Court endeavored to advise and at times
to supervise the actions of the neophytes.
The spirit of the Class of 1961 overflowed at
times, and the Court attempted to direct and chan-
nel this overflow more than to dam it. This spirit
would not be denied, however, and the Court was
able to retire, cheerfully, after the Freshmen were
victorious over the Sophomores on the field of
friendly combat.
.h,,Uj,
Phil Lewis
the Court of Control
Dave Fagg George Hart Larry .McNeill
Charlie Stowe Craig Wall
Page L^itietytwo
The Publications Board
OFKICKKS
John Tkask
I'.ii I. Wilkinson
('lidiriiuni
Seen Id r If
The Davidson lit»M:iti and those who i)rovided
the "wherewithal" to make the artistic dah-
bliiiKs possible met every month under the tii-
tehiKe of Mr. Martin and Mr. Kiml^roiiKh. This
year, since each of the publications had procured
its respective "Maecenas." the board, which had
formerly been a hot bed of cold feet, threw finan-
cial caution to the wind. Nevertheless, when the
year had ended, the pile of shavings seems to bal-
ance with the original "board," and there was
enou>rh left over to finance the traditional .steak
dinner.
Chairman Trask engineered each meeting with
increasinjr skill and alacrity until, at the end of
the year, it became almost unnecessary to meet.
Undaunted. Secretary Wilkin.-^on wrote imagina-
tive reports concerninvr the financial jfointrs on,
and we voted to have them printed and bound t<j
save tor all posterity.
While all thinjfs moved forward in a chanjfinjf
David.son, the Publications Hoard was keeping
pace. Amonjr the innovations were a new rujj for
Mr. Martin's otiice. a magazine with humor, a
newsi)ai)er with an audible editorial voice, and
an annual with four pajres of beauties.
As the final and mo.st important task, we nomi-
nated the younjr aspirants who would carry the
white flatr of idealism to new eras of Uavid.son
(lemaKo>ruery. Then, having consumed our well-
earned steaks, we all sat around for a while,
thinking about what a damn jrood >rroup it was
and c()ntem])latin>r our well-filled navels.
Members: C. Davis, J. Trask, B. Wilkinson, and D. Bradford (Seated). P. Henderson,
Mr. Martin, Mr. Kinibrough, and P. Sterling (Standing).
Im^
^I^^B^'v^^^^^^^^H
Hiiae Xiiieli three
David Bradford, E(Utoi--in-Chief
^C3
'\y.m0M'^^*~
Quips and Cranks
EDITORIAL STAFF
Seniors Bill Patton
Juniors _ Walter Bishop
Sophomores BOBBY AviNGER
Freshmen Pete Wyrick
Student Activities Sam Smith
Fraternities BcB Jones
Honoravies John Caldwell
Sports Staff
Feature Editor ._ Willie Thompson
Combining the diverse talents of an Editorial
Staff to produce the conglomerate that is a college
annual is an intricate but challenging job. Those
who strive to organize and to present a summary
of "a year of our life" are rewarded, in part, by an
understanding of the complexity of its embryonic
and fetal stages. However, this analogy for its
evolution is not quite accurate for the annual ; be-
cause after its conception, it is more than devel-
oped— it is molded. For each part is hand-turned,
not to the impossibility of perfection, but to the
acceptibility of good form and meaningful con-
tent.
Credits: to the little-seen-because-working
Business Staff which, under the wary eye of Pete
Sterling, conjured up enough cash in this reces-
sion year to clear us : to Dave Bradford, who
lashed or lauded as was necessary to spur on the
magnitudinous Volume : to Bill Patton, Sam
Smith. John Caldwell, and Bob Jones, who wres-
tled with the headache sections ; to Willie Thomp-
son, whose efforts added the literary touch to our
writing: to the various other helpers, runners,
tyjiists, and readers who gave time and temper for
the Task; to our photographers Paschall, Cuni-
ming, Stevens, and newcomer Charlie Rose whoso
Dnsinrss Staff: PETE STERLING, Peie .\M!I;i.\\ .s, a.nd
Chris Bremmer
Photographers: Charlie Rose and
Fairmax Cummi.n::
I'KIK SlK'LINn. Hiiiiiiisn Maiiaj/f
work spoiiks for itself ln'tttr thiiii many thousaiuls
of words.
We were thankful ajrain this year for our serv-
iceable hut beaten '■cell" on the second level of the
College Union. Key No. 58 .saw a lot of circulation
this year, thanks to the indulgence of the down-
.stairs office. We were bles.sed durinjr the year by
a new l)ulletin ijoard — permanently attached to
the wall — which necessitated removal of yeai's-old
notices AXD by the appearance of a much needed
-second tyi)ewriter. We were Ki'ateful for the .stu-
dent cooperation required in obtaining; pictures,
portraits, and material for the composition of
the Book: for the assi.stance of facultv and ad-
Kiiifuis: Sam S.mith. \\ ii.i.ik 1 momi
Bob .Jo.vrs, A.\r> .lOH.v Caldwell
mini.stration in areas beyond our immediate influ-
ence. /-•
Quips and cranks, cuts and curses, and a few
wanton wiles ajrain marked the periodic jrather-
injrs of loyal laborers, who this year, more than
ever, strove to pre.sent the David.son Scene in the
mo.st realistic terms oo.ssible.
Editors Bobby Avinger, Bill Patton, Dave Bradford, Pete Wip-ick, and
Walter Bishop get together for one of their all night sessions.
PiJge Nine/) -/ire
STAFF
Assistant Editor Gerald Wilson
Associate Editor JOHN JoHNSCN
Managing Editor Bob Lathan
Managing Editor _ LAURENS Walker
Sports Editor GEORGE Ramsey
Assignme)its Editor Bill Patton
Feature Editor JiM MORRIS
Copy Editor Julian Aldridge
News Editor Bruce Brooks
Cartoonists Bross, Cole
Advertising Manager Henry Samuels
Circulation Manager Lee Mayfield
PJtotographer Ed Stevens
Precedents were shattered and tempers were inflamed, but this
year's Davidsonian inaugurated a new conception of opinion and a
new awareness of issues. The paper strongly supported preferential
bidding, separation of the honor and legislative functions of the
Student Council, a more mature Hell Week, a more liberal drinking
rule, a stronger honor system, and a reversal of the Trustees' decision
to increase the enrollment to a thousand students. Editor Trask
caused no little discussion with his pro-Southern, moderate stand on
the Little Rock occupation by "General Ike's army," his satire of
"Hilarious Herbert Brownell," and his support of the traditional
free enterprise system. These editorials, which were reprinted in many
other college newspapers, aroused letters from parents and students
from other colleges, and were the cause of many classroom and chapel
references.
Assistant Editor Gerald Wilson added his talents to the paper by
writing occasional editorials, keeping Trask on an even keel, and
helping in the administration of the Wednesday night lay out meet-
ings. His sharp, penetrating, and analytical writings made him a
favorite for reporting the weekly luncheon interviews with various
college notables.
John Trask, Editor-in-Chief
Pat Henderson. Unsitiess Manage
nnsiiicus Staff: HENRY SAMUELS, Pat
IlENnERSGN, AND LEE MAYFIELD.
I'at Heiulersoii. tlu' first .Iiinior ever to servo
as IJiisiiu'ss Maniijrer. did a professional jol) in
the pecuniary phase of piililishin^r the Dmid-
snniitii. Hendei'son's sound business tactics ami
coDK'enial manner permitted him to keep l)oth his
popularity an<i firm control over the fiscal man-
agement.
Laurens Walker's ability to create new ideas
always found the editorial pajre a jrooil locality
to display his talents. His consistent ellicii-ncy and
the able assistance of Charles Chastain made the
eiiitorial the center attraction of the "inside
I)aper." John Hernhardt, Hoh Jones, Phil Lewis,
and Charles Helms kept the .students thinkinj.^
with their weekly columns of everything from
complacency to local yro.ssi)).
Hill Patton heli)ed to run the whole show. His
dependability and ayr^rressiveness .saved the paper
many po.ssible Weilnesday ni^ht headaches. Pat-
ton ably fulfilled his job of sending out a.ssijrn-
ments, supervising the head writers, and dijrjrinjr
up late stories.
Others added their invaluable contribution. Bob
Lathan revolutionized the make-up by adding
more appealing and di-amatic headlines and
larjrer photojrraphs. The "Dear Folks" letters and
fresh humor of Cieorjre Ram.sey made his sports
column equal to the best of the dailies. Bobby
Pajre, Bill Hellier. Jimmy Hamilton, and Henry
Ram.sey helped make this pajre one of the more
popular ones. Jim Morris, as feature Editor, ran
polls on drinkinjr, the freshmen I.Q.. and dance
weekenil habits.
HcH I.uii.vN, Geow.e IU.msky, ami I.,^l;.i;ns Wai.kki
supervise the printiiiK of the weekly issue.
In spite of the somewhat reactionary stand, this
year's Daridsoniaii was truly a successful one.
With the relentless work of Editor Trask, aided
by a sharp and well organized staff, issues were
so pre.sented that many found them.selves think-
ing for the first time.
Eflilorial staff: FRANK Taylor, Dick S.MiTU, JouN Trask, BILL Patto.n (seated at
typewriter), George Ramsey, and Gerald Wilson.
Grier Davis, Editor-in-Chief
Scripts 'n Pranks
To hell with the dance.
Ah, yes! A time to live and a time to die! And four times during
the year we engaged in what always seemed to be a life's work.
We began the year by evading the traditional evils of every maga-
zine editor — the creditor's hand and the censor's scissors. This year
for a change, due to the efforts of our stalwart business manager,
we were financially soluble. And undaunted by the disembodied voices
from Chambers which warned us to keep it on the level, we specialized
in innuendoes and double entendres?
Having gathered together all our fertile imaginative figments, we
gave issuance to our first born, ConforDiitii. The title page revealed
our secret forces, among whom were Pope Pius XII, Elvis Pressley,
Billy Graham, and the immortal Chalmers Davidson.
We felt that our magazine, the only one with a Harris tweed cover,
was truly the first to think like everyone else. But alas ! We were in-
formed by a noted anthropologist that the only way there could be
true conformity is if Adam and Eve had been identical twins. Per-
haps, it was best that Adam had that spare rib.
Business Staff: David Gii.lis, Bill Wilkinscv, Tom Doucla.s
liii.i, Wilkinson
Hiiitiiiinii Miimiyrr
Nevertheless, we succeeded in stating our i)ur-
pose — to i)ro(luce a majrazine that would not only
titillate but also stimulate the Davidson student
body. We thought that the "natui'al superioi'ity"
of the Davitlson Cientleman should receive a few
pointed criticisms: therefore, armed with "jrift
of jab." we addressed ourselves to the humor of
])ertinent satire.
Having received a few words of commendations
from our sister publication. Tin Davidsdiiiaii. we
felt benevolent towaril her; but, unable to con-
.strain public opinion, we finally delivered a rapier-
like thrust entitled The Daridsolccisni. This was
accompanied in the Christmas issue by the
"Twenty-third Psalm" and a few choice comments
and cartoons on Christmas.
The rejoinder from the pajjer dropped the de-
risive phra.se. "poorman's PLAYBOY." and we
promptly picked it up. After all, what better
source is there for a parody i.ssue than the ".so-
phisticated" magazines which proverbially litter
the Davidson dorms.
Somewhat dubious about whether there was any
real literary talent on the campus and plagued
by our earlier freedom with the purse, we pre-
sented our last offering — a literary and budget
issue, dedicated to the traditional rites of May.
Thus, we succumbed, convinced that we had
added new luster to our glorious Anglo-Saxon
heritage.
w w> '■' <<r~v -^
. . jiioiidiiuj criticism of the "natural sii-
pcriority" of the Davidson Gentleman
Kditiirial Staff: F. CoLE. T. Kernan, C. Davis. W. Wolf. B. Long. D. Carmichael.
A. Wang. G. i)Avis.
Camera Club
OFFICERS
Ed Stevens President
Fairman Cumming Secretary-Treasurer
Except for three old photographers, the Camera
Club was composed of an entirely new group. The
chief legacy from the old club was a brand-new
set of rules, which began by stating that the or-
ganization was "to stimulate an interest in pho-
tography and to provide facilities for photogra-
phers to learn and practice techniques involved
in producing pictures." To these ends, the several
new members who had had no experience were
given lessons on developing and printing tech-
niques along with programs on evaluating various
films, papers, chemicals, and darkroom equip-
ment. Members also criticized each other's prints
on their respective good and bad merits of light-
ing, composition, and print quality.
A new experience in the club was the enjoy-
ment of a member's movies, some of them taken
aerially. Innovations included the introduction of
an "associate membership" status and the exten-
sion of "gratis" membership to our helpful ad-
Photo of the Year
"Bahia Honde"
bij Fairman Cinnmiiiy
visor. Dr. French. Unexpected spice, never before
included in our remembered existence, was added
upon the invitation of Queens College to attend
a two-day photography seminar.
Remaining independent, the Camera Club
nevertheless worked more closely than ever with
student publications.
Blake
Morris
Ratchford
Gumming Hollister
Rose Stevens
Hunt
Womble
f!^^ a^ f^^
Page One Hundred
The Concert And Football Band
I'rrsidtnt
Virr-Pnsitltiit
Sfrntorii
Histtninii
OKKICKKS
AKTIHK I,AWltENCE
Pkkston Facc.art
Boh Mokkison
Fairman Cumminc.
Tlu' DiiviiisoM Colli'Ki" ('(iiK'iTt Kami compU'tcd
aiiothor siiccfssfiil soason, diirinyr 1957-58. once
ayaiii iiniler tlie al)lo diroctioii of Mr. Frank West,
and continued to live up to its reputation as the
"South's Finest Concert Band." As such, it aRain
proved its merit as one of the College's best pub-
licity ajrents.
In spite of practice sessions disrupted by a flu
epidemic, reviews, and other intermissions, the
most was maile of valuable time; and the band
was in jrood shape before each concert. The con-
cert tour consi.sted of many trips to all sections
of North Carolina, rather than the traditional
lonvf distance tour, in order to contact more pros-
pective Davidson Cientlemen nearer home.
Tlu' repertoire from whicli the l)and drew num-
bers for concerts was larjrer than it had been in
the past. It included works of all periods repre-
.sentinK the best in concert iiand literature with
numbers l)y Ro.ssini, Haydn, Bizet, Saint-Saens.
Mou.s.sortrsky, V'aufrhan-Wiiliams, and Hindemith,
to mention only a few.
In addition to ajjpearances on the tour, the Band
Kave a numl)er of performances in David.son and
vicinity, including one in Charlotte. For the first
time in a number of years, the Band auve a con-
cert on the campus before Chri.stmas, in addition
to the usual one in the sprinfr, as well as a .series
of ii^ht concerts on the lawn of the Union, which
closed the season.
Members: Bennett, Bethea, Brenner, Bridgman, Ciu r, Clark, Collins, Craig, Gumming, Daniel, De-
Shazo, Edmunds, Edwards, Faggart, Gravely, Hall, Hedrick, Hendry, Hoagland, Keller, I.awrence,
Mc.-Mister, Moore, J., Moore, L., Morrison, Norris, Nye, Pancoast, Puckett, Thrower, Wells, Williams,
Wilson, Wolfe, Wrifrht, Zemp.
Page One fiumircd One
The Male Chorus
OFFICERS
President Grier Davis
Vice-President Tim Teachey
Secretarij Bob Jones
Chaplain Walter Clark
The Davidson College Male Chorus attempts
to acquaint its members with the best in choral
music of all time, while instilling- an appreciation
of that music through the quality of the choral
work produced.
The selectivity of the group and the many hours
of intense practice are in part responsible for the
uniformly outstanding quality, particularly in
tone, color, and discipline that is characteristic
of the group. It is, however, the amiability and
skill of Director Donald Plott, recognized by many
as the "rising choral director in the South," that
enables him to mold the chorus into a truly uni-
fied organ of musical interpretation. It is his rap-
port and personality which assures the group of
its "professional sheen."
The musicianship and artistry of the Male
Chorus has been acclaimed by critics throughout
eighteen southern and eastern states. The Herald-
Dispatch of Huntington, West Virginia, discribed
the group as singing "with precise discipline,
but with enough flexibility to escape any taint of
purely mechanical performance," and prai.sed the
concert as having "professional sheen."
A full year, featuring two performances of
Haydn's Mass No. 2 in C major, one with the Con-
verse Chorus in Spartanburg, and one with the
Woman's College Choir in Greensboro, plus a
deeply moving concert at Chri.stmas Vespers, was
highlighted by the long awaited Spring Tour. On
tour, the chorus gave performances in Missouri,
Oklahoma, Texas, Mississippi, and Alabama. We
were especially pleased with the French pieces by
Poulenc and the two Russian numbers "Hospodi"
and "Salvation."
Each year brings its own rewards. The discom-
forts of crowded life on a bus will melt away in
the memories of "T.C.," the discoverv of latent
wit, "DADDY PLOTT," the quartet, and tho.se
many personal remembrances.
Membt-rs: Adkins, Bootle, Boyce, Clark, Cook, Covington, Ci'aig, Crawford, Davis, Dublin, Glenn, Hill,
.Tones, J., Jones, B., Kepler, Kwon, Lamm, Loftin, MacKay, McCorkle, McNeill, McVay, Mainor, Moore,
Otten, Patterson, Reeves, Rich, Spivey, Starling, Teachey, Thonip.-nn, Wilson, Woodward, Wyrick.
^^^^^^B^^^'^^^^H^ ^^^^k ■
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.Urmbcrs: Armstrong, Collins, DenHani, Steele, Stettler, Byrd, McCarty, Marston, Moore, Pharr, Pope.
Ropers, Smyth, Stowell, Wells, Atkinson, Faggart, Lawrence, Ray, Wesley, Womble, Womeldorf,
Bell, Braswell, Clemmer, Cooley, Dickens, Hardy, Hoaghmd, .laques, Kennedy, Metts, Yarboro, Baggett,
.Mc Murray.
Chapel Choir
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Chaplain
Preston Faggart
Ray Atkinson
Allan Smyth
Classical Club
Members: Thompson, I'renidoit, Davis, Roper, Treaxurir, Kernan, Farley, Daniel, \'iee-Presideiit, R.
Daniel, Wilson, Patterson, Chapin, Jones, Thrailkill, Stuart, Rucker, Clark, Otten, Cutting, Groome,
Secretary, O'Briant, LeMaster, Livingston, Rich.
^ .'T-^^ or^^
IMMl
4
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The College Union
It was only a little over a student generation
ago that the David Ovens College Union came to
the campus. Having as its primary purpose, "serv-
ice to students as well as student activities," it
rapidly grew in importance. Its prodigious growth
can easily be understood by looking at its pro-
grams.
In providing space for student government.
Publications, and YMCA work, the Union quickly
became the center of campus activities. The rec-
reational aspects of the campus were also satisfied
by card rooms, TV, billiards, table tennis, and a
snack bar. A modernistic cafeteria coupled with
ballroom facilities gave Fraternities and other
such groups the much needed dining and social
accommodations.
C. Shaw Smith
Director of the College Union
Ralph Bright
Chairman of Committees
iicir facef! li'erc a ircJrontr addifian.
. . . asfiistance iu scciiruKj jiropir ( iti phuniunf.
Page One Hundred Four
h'itn Slirich, noprano ntnr nf Ihr
"Mil.," dtUiihts criiirdK tiatlicrrtl
III I III I'liinii fiilliiirinii hi r rntirrrl.
A Placement Bureau to assist seniors in secur-
ing,' proper employment after graduation rounded
out the list of services.
But the Union was more than a place of serv-
ices; it, in reality, was the "livinjr room of the
campus." This was the spot where friends, pro-
fessors and students, fraternity men and inde-
pendents, found a common meeting jrround. This
was the campus at leisure.
The College Union thus became a vital asjjcct
of the David.son Scene.
The Artist Series trii' n: jj'h.-- (u/aiii as
Daniel Schorr, CBS correspondent to
Moscow, comes to Davidson.
Committee Chair
Atkinson, Moore. Briciit, Daniel. Calpwei-l. Khmlnds,
Bross, Crawford, Shoffner.
Quips and Cranks
presents
BEAUTIES
o£ 1958
Miss Sakaii ?:lizabeth Pullen
W'onnni'n Colli gc of the UuivcrKifii <>f Xorfli Cnrnliva
Piijte One Utiudred Se\en
Miss Betsy Smith
Sweet Briar College
Miss Sibet Sandkks
IhiircrsH II of South Cjirnliiia
Miss Sisteu Sanuifer
]Vi)itliroi) CoUific
Miss Jean McLaurin
Qkcciis CoUvf/f
"What has a man from all the
toil and strain 7vith which he
toils beneath the sun?''
-ECCLESIASTES
The cheering crowd at the WOF-
FORD GAME was evidence of the
finest football wc had ever seen.
The well-developed athletic program of David-
son College continued to offer something interest-
ing and exciting to both participants and observ-
ers.
Football was still King, and the crowds had
much praise for the Wildcats throughout the fall.
Led by tricky ball-handling in the backfield and
the best line Coach Dole ever had, the team did
very well. The Wofford game was probably the
finest game most of us had ever seen a Davidson
football team play.
Soccer increased in popularity throughout the
fall as the fans began to grow in an understand-
ing of this cosmopolitan sport.
The swimming team had a great deal of re-
building to do this year. They achieved this admir-
ably, being led by strong victories in the back-
stroke, the butterfly, and the freestyle.
Wrestling had its most popular year in some
time. Westervelt amazed everyone with a tremen-
dous winning streak. A young team gave the fans
something to anticipate for several years.
Coach Whittle seemed to be out on the track
the entire year. The cross-country team had a
great deal of re-building to do. and there were key
men to replace on the track team when spring
finally came.
Basketball had its up and downs in the winter
months. Boasting one of the best first-half teams
in the conference, Davidson often lacked the re-
serve strength to keep a strong pace in the second
half.
W^hen the snow melted, Coach McKee cleaned
off the tennis courts, Coach Scott mowed the putt-
ing green, and Coach Stevens dusted off home-
plate. Studies were already over as far as the
majority were concerned.
An till PRE-MED FOOTBALL TEAM is indeed a nniqi
Buck row: JOYNER, Setzler, Warden', McCuli.oi'gh. Fm
BiGGERS, Price, James, Watwooh. Finc ii.
htippeniug at ani/ college.
roir: WESTERVELT, VOIGI",
Tht- hiinl woikiiiK S(K (KK
TKAM offoreil the funs
.sonu-thin^ nt-w un the D.C.
cunipus.
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Members of the RIFLE TEAM were finally recog-
nized as letritimate recipients of a varsity letter.
First row. Wilson, Harper, Lohman, Wearn, RuR-
gles, and George.
Second rote: Gaines, Johnson, Parker, Ricks, Driver,
Gettis.
Third row: Martin, Robinson.
A YOUNG TEAM gave the fans
something to anticipate for years.
F. ge One Jiuiidred Thirleen
, \i v^ ^ -'^tI^^^H
■■I^H
P^H
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Int
ramurais
1
Kl K KLKI! VI I luuls tlu KW
and Fhi Dells in heatfd attiun.
The intramural sports program continued to
provide former high sciiool stars with fleeting
moments of resurrected glory. To others it offered
a means of working off classroom frustrations.
Still others found this to be a means of working
off their "German goiters."
The combination of flu and bad weather con-
verted flickerball into a winter sport before the
season was finally completed. The KA's edged the
Sigma Chi's for the crown in this modified version
of non-subsidized football.
The Phi Belts tried "to hog" the show in the
wrestling tournament, but the muscles and guts
of the Kappa Sigs weighed the heaviest of all, re-
sulting in their decisive victory.
Basketball was a game of individual scoring
stars topped by a wee redhead named Ferguson.
The KA's, Kappa Sigs, and Sigma Chi's all bat-
tled hotly for first place as the season neared its
close.
The swimming meet was undoubtedly the most
revealing competition during the year. The Phi
Belts and SAE's proved what everyone already
knew — that they had a lot of fish in their midst.
The Red Cross bloodletters finally moved out
of the handball courts and allowed the students
to play there. The Betas came through undefeated.
Coach Whittle filled out his track team by care-
fully watching each event in the interfraternity
track meet. Again this year, this was one of the
closest competitions.
As volleyball, tennis, and softball approached,
it looked as if there would be a close battle all the
wav to the middle of Mav before the interfrater-
The KAPPA ALPHAS show their streng-th against the
Pi Kapps.
The KAPPA SIGS stomp to victory in
wrestling, yet "Hog" Anderson shows
that the Phi Delts still are in the show.
Page One Hundred Fmirteen
HANDHAI.I. was (loiiiiiiaUd l).v tho lUlas iliio to
the fine aliility of Jim Keyiioliis ami Xed CJwathney.
nity championship would i)e decided. The KA's
and the Phi Deits seemed to have the best chance.
Other stroiiK contenders were the SAE's, the Sijr-
ma C'his, and the Kappa Si^s-
It was a year of ajjitation and progress in the
administration of the entire intramural proKram.
At la.st a decision was made not to include jjoints
for varsity competition when determining the
championship.
The sports managers met regularly to discuss
their problems. There was .some talk about allow-
injr a stronger student voice in determiniuK the
sports projrram. Bit by bit, the managers "whit-
tled" away at the intramural authority.
The SWIMMING .MKKI was taken by the I'hi Delts
witli the SAEl'.s running a close second.
I N T K A MURAL REPKESEN-
TATIVES meet with Coach Whittle in
older to plan future events. Left to
rijrht: Whittle. .Andrews, Wilson,
West, Greene, Reid, Terrell, Cline,
Warlick, Ferrell, Norvell.
^.. vr
Sonny Ferguson
Basketball
wl K,,i. \\ M.LACE
Dutscbull
Dale Gramley
Track
\7^'s<!^/t
Honor Men of 1958
Ross Smyth
Soccer
Fritz Russell
Siritnmiiig
Back Row: Shoffner, Booth, Reynolds, Rieger.
Front Row: STEWART, Fry, Jones, Thompson.
Cheerleaders
Tom MrCuTCHAN
Trim is
Angus MrBRYPE
Golf
Football
Season Results
Catawlia at Charlotte
Kasl Carolina at (Ireenville
('italic! at Davidson «
\'.M.l. at Li'xirijrton
W. V'a. Tech at Davidson
Wofford at Davidson
Richmond at Richmond
Furman at Greenville
26-7
19-6
7-21
11-26
3.'M4
16-7
2:1-19
2-6
Head Coach BII.I. DOI.l';
With the return to campus in September, ath-
letically inclined minds shifted immediately to
football. What could Coach Bill Dole, who in his
six year tenure had lifted the Cats hijrh above
the "moral victory" status, disijlay for ea^rer fans?
The crystal ball Kiizers were full of ideas. "How
can you win when your quarterback supply is lim-
ited to a sophomore and a freshman?" "How can
you lose with a bijr. ruKKed and experienced line?"
It appeared that the fate of the season would
focus on the signal-calling slot because there was
plenty of talent available to fill the other ten po-
sitions.
It was this same slot, therefore, on which all
eyes were focused opening ni^ht. The drenching
rain was merciless to the early arriving fans at
Charlotte's Memorial Stadium but agreeably
les.sened its fury when the contest bejran. A .soft
turf and a slipi)ery ball cramped the playinjr .style,
but elated supi)orters watched the Cats earn a
26 to 7 triumph over the Indians of Catawba. They
also .saw the play that was to brinjr the .stands
to their feet many times during the sea.son. Thirty-
.seven yards from the jroal line. quarteri>ack Ben-
son hit end Westervelt with a lijrhteninjr quick
jump pass that was jrood for six points.
Co-cantain D.-WK FAGG
t^
it'
fi:-±
Co-captain BILL PRICE
Bob Stancil, Guard
Jiilix Fka.nlIS, llallbucL-
\nl,.;, ia.kU
The Red and Black now had the direction they need-
ed, combined with defensive power and an offense that
flashed running and passing potential.
One week later in Greenville, North Carolina, the
weather again turned its back to the cause, so the
Wildcat line was called upon to play the major role.
Play they did, as center Bill Price intercepted a pass
to set up one touchdown and guard Charlie James
blocked a punt to provide another as East Carolina
became the second victim, to the tune of 19 to 6. It
was an end. Wall, who caught one scoring pass and
another end, Westervelt, who crossed the goal line
with the blocked punt.
With two victories on the scorecard the squad looked
good, but no one was sure how good because it was yet
to compete under ideal conditions. October 5 was the
perfect aftenoon ; the sun was shining brightly, the
air was crisp, and Richardson Stadium was loaded
for the first home clash.
WARDEN nails a Wofford Lack.
Tom Redding
Qimrterback
Charlie Benson
Qiiarterhack
Ralph Setzler
Halfback
Frank Anderson
V.
1{ \KHKK liriMks luu, i\v
Icar I'di- SIX points airairisi ( alawiia.
The w hite-uiiifornu'd Citadel Riilldojrs looked
like KJants when they ran onto the field. The un-
impressed Cats drew first blood in the vicious
pame, but the Cadets' defense plus a batterinjr
ram named Thomas were the final winners, 21
to 7.
Few fans were disappointed, thouph. with the
way the pame was i^layed and they looked forward
to the bijr test apainst V.M.I, in Lexinjrton. For
the Keydets, it was virtually the same team that
had lost to the Wildcats in '55 and tied them in
'56. What about '57'.' Elxperience made the differ-
ence as an extremely vocal homecominp crowd
cheered the Keydets to a 26 to 14 triumph over
bitterly fiphtinp Davidson. V.M.I. showed the form
that was destined to make them the undefeated
conference champions, and the Cats licked their
wounds which included the loss of three .startinp
backtield men.
The injured players were not needed the fol-
lowinp week becau.se the now-mad Wildcats mer-
cilessly tore up West \'irpinia Tech 33 to 14. Even
the men from the bench were too much for the
hapless Knpineers. Reversinp the results of their
previous home appearance, the Red and Black
apain hoisted up their pre.stipe flap.
Outsiders were not impressed, so Dole's boys
hunpered to prove themselves apainst traditional
rival Presbyterian Collepe. They were robbed of
the fulfillment of that desire as a competition
famine settled on the local sports .scene. Flu hit
the squad from South Carolina and then struck
at home. The cancelled contest and an open date
resulted in three pameless weeks.
Charlie .Iames, Guard
Pave McLain, Guard
Harold Westervelt, End
.Joel Spragins, Guard
Alex Porter
End
<0fl^
y^SJ
George Hart
End
Coach Dole had no idea how the Ions layoff would
affect his squad, but he was soon to find out because
Wofford was brinpin<r a highly heralded team to Rich-
ardson Stadium. The Terriers were ranked first in the
nation amonp small colleges. The prophets of doom
were themselves doomed, however, for the battling
Wildcats lived up to every implication of their name
as they mauled the stunned visitors in "Davidson's
greatest effort in over six years." The 16 to 7 score was
no indication of the decisiveness with which the victors
tromped on the vanquished. Time and time again Ter-
rier backs ended up on the wrong side of the line keep-
ing company with red-shirted tacklers.
Dave Warden. Fiillhnck-
>£M4f
OS its cxcpllcnoc airainst V.M.I.
The outlook was rosy now. and Rich-
mond was next. In contra.st to the out-
look, rain and overcast skies provided
a dull, damp .settinp in the Virginia
city. The Si)iders failed to read the
newspaj^ers and led in the contest until
three minutes remained on the clock.
Then, under the passinfr and catchinjr
combination of Benson and Wall, the
Dolemen calmly lifted a Kame from the
fire ju.st as it was about to be consumed.
The final .score was 23 to 19, and it was
a squeaker that would be hard to for-
get.
Furman provided the curtain for the
schedule. Old Man Weather had not
been able to work up a jrood gale all
season, but he apparently saved his best
effort for the Cats.
JOHN (;. sniaslu's throutrli the Knyiiu'cis' fnrtifications.
Pail Barbee
Hatfhack
Crak; Wall
Etid
Mud bogs down the Wildcat
attack at Furman.
In wet, near-freezing weather before a
record low crowd, the Purple out-waded
Davidson 6 to 2. It was a cold, heartbreaking
finish : but the season itself was a success.
Bill Dole's boys had compiled a record of
five wins against three losses and had given
fans an exciting season of football. Three
conference pass receiving records fell to end
Craig Wall, and Captain Bill Price placed
as the number one center on the United Press
All-Southern Conference squad.
A relatively unnoticed, but impressive item
was the fact that the graduating seniors had
played on a winning team all four seasons,
making them the first class in many years
to claim the distinction.
r Terrier.
>^S|N'
SETZLER drives hard for
yardage around the end of
the Citadel line.
'J
_ >
A/^\
^:¥
U-^iiL^^5piirf>^
1
/",
r^MfBt:
^
•".. t
Coiu-ht's Ccortri' Thompson,
Bill Dole, and Tom SU-veiis.
KOOTHALLTKAM immbcis are:
First row: Wat wood, Benson, Price, Graniley, Fage.
Second row: Setzler, Francis, Barbee, Warden, James, Wall.
Third row: Redding:, Thurman, Smith, Bynum, Bifrgers, Hart, McCullou^h, Westervelt.
Foiirlh row: Porter, Smith, .loyiier, Davis, Cotton, McLain, Stancil, Bloomfield.
Fifth row: Anderson, Voigt, Finch, Lacy, Cox, Crute, Spragins.
Sixth row: Grey, Beckham, Dole, Thompson, Stevens.
8'^^^2>'l
Head Coach TOM SCOTT and
Assistant Coach ERNIE WIGGINS
Basketball
SEASON RESULTS
Wake Forest 61-68
Geoi-Ria Tech 52-74
Charleston 94-50
Wofford 67-58
Catawba 54-48
Catawba 47-45
La. Tech 41-66
Bucknell 58-68
Lafayette 46-65
V. M. I 56-52
Washington & Lee 84-63
William & Mary 61-75
Furman 72-70
The Citadel 42-61
V. P. L . 51-64
William & Mary 53-72
Washington & Lee 55-61
V. M. L 76-65
Furman 70-85
The Citadel 42-49
Charleston 103-51
V. P. I. 58-90
Wofford - 62-64
MINTZ goes up for two against V.P.I.
ONE-H.\NDED push shot by high-jumping Bill
Shinn rings up two against The Citadel.
Three names shone like oases on a desert as a
hot-an(l-fol(i Davidson liasketl)all team pursued
its weary journey across a '2'A ^ame sehechde.
Mint/., the charity tosser, HollinKsworth, the
i)acklioard ace, and Shinii, the cracker-jack marks-
man, bore the load as coach Tom Scott's live
poi.sed a constant enijrma to followers of the hard-
wood sport.
It was not a mnnl omen to open with Wake For-
est; but, suri)risin>rly, the Deacons found them-
selves hai)py to ease through with a ()8-(Jl win
over a gritty Wildcat team. Moving on to Atlanta
anil christening the (leorKMa Tech .season with a
74-52 win for the Yellow .Jackets, the 'Cats were
already staring up from the canvas. Yet from here
to vacation time it was all Davidson. The local
(juintet hit four for four, counting out the Collej^e
of Charleston, Wofford, and Catawba twice — all
within seven days.
Santa Claus, unimpressed by the display, drop-
ped three holiday whippinjrs in the Wildcat stock-
in^r. as Davidson entertained at the Carrousel
Tournament with the nicest of manners.
B.\(KB().\KI)-.\CE Dave H..llin;.'-w..i tli
blazes a trail through the Furiuau line-up.
B.\SKETB.VLL TE.\M members are:
First row: Martin, Stewart, Wilder, Nuckolls, Miliier, Holliiigsworth, Shinn, Spears.
Secutid row: Fertru.son, Mintz, Huie, Markee, Bowner, Stafford, Redmond, Coach Scott.
A TENSE MOMENT as Hullingsvvorth reaches for a higli-thiown ball.
A FAST BREAK for the basket
is made by Mike Martin against
W & L.
Bruce Wilder
John Stafford
Joe Milner
Ed Stewart
Back on the trail in the New Year, a successful
jaunt into \'irjrinia netted wins over VMl and
\V & L before William and Mary threw a 75-61
monkey wrench in the Cat machine. Hut nuickly
returninvr to familiar environs, the Scottmen
hoisted the Wildcat fla^ a^ain as they downed
Furnian's Purple Pala<lins for the first time in the
memoi'y of the jiresent Davidson generation. Dave
Hollin^sworth clinched the i.ssue with a juni]) shot
in the final five .seconds for a 72-70 win. Yet all
was not "sweetne.ss and liRht," for the .studded
Citadel five were soon to lay a (il-l'i defeat on the
hapless Cats.
The fortunes of the Da\ idson five ran cold
following the scholastic intei'ruption of exams.
Fate was to throw favorable dice for them only
twice. Midst seven losses, the bo\s nianaKcd to
pump out a 7G-65 Parents' Nijrht win, one of their
finest efforts of the year, in the home court finale
and later run up a 108-51 tally ajrainst the Col-
lege of Charle.ston.
Conference tourney pairings once ajrain found
Davidson matched with Destiny, which decreed
a first round loss.
Nevertheless, all in all it was a successful year.
Mintz had learned well the lessons taught by as-
sistant coach Ernie WijrRins, and had thus become
one of the country's top free throw artists, hitting
on .87:5 i)ercent. HoUinKsworth had snared 202
rebounds to lead his team in that dei)artment.
Raleifrh sharpshooter. Bill Shinn, had maintained
a spot among the top field goal percentage leaders
in the nation — an excellent 46', average.
I'KI;K IIIWOW VirriSf, .Smii Mimz, j. roves his
capabilities in other departments.
Jon.N UriE
Lew Spears
Sonny Ferguson
Bud Hunter
Track
SCHEDULE
The Citadel
Richmond
Wake Forest
Ciemson and N. C. State
Furman
Washington and Lee
Wake Forest
Coach IIKATH
GRAMLEY.
Taking up where you left oflf is no easy task
when you left off with an undefeated record.
Coach Heath Whittle found this true in 1958 as
he fielded another strong track unit, yet he was
quick to admit that this year's team was weaker
than the one which last season compiled an 8-0
record.
The veteran mentor found the '57 squad miler
Pete Ashcraft notably missing as well as sprinters
Mel Armstrong and Al Elder and weight man.
Bill Gramlev. In addition to a weaker Davidson
team, the stronger outfits of opponents made pros-
pects of another perfect season very dim.
Dale Gramley, captain of the team, handled
the shot put and discus throw. Outstanding in the
distance events were Angus McBryde, Henry
Brown, and Jim Alexander. Al MacKav took care
of the 880.
Brownie Thurman in the 440 and Marvin Bent-
ley and Ed Kiser in the 100 and 220-yard dashes
were the best bets for glory.
HURDLERS Bill Cannon and Jim Hambright show flawless form as
they prepare for a new season.
BROADJUMPER Marvin Bentley
shows excellent promise as he takes
over another event.
Page One Hundred Thirty
SI'UlNII-.ltS Ma.Kay, l:.rill,
tape at the sound t>f the I'liii.
Soi)h Cris Ilromei' I'etiinieil to take care of the
broad jump and hurdle events, with John Huie
in the i)ole vault and hijrh jump. RoundiuK out
the events. Stuart Nickles hurled the javelin for
the Cats.
Through the years the name Whittle has be-
come associated with hiKh calibre track. 1958 was
no exception.
.Stuaii .:■ 1 i .\ \\ 1. 1. IN I IIKOW l,l;
piepares I'ui llu- I'iriak-.
TK.VCK TE.\M members take time out from the afternoon workout: Frotit raif. Mur-
rey, West, George, Bentley, -Mexander. C, .Me.xander, .J. Hack nur : Fleagle, Khame,
{iiice, MacKay, Nickles, Cole. Cannon, Pharr. Davis. Powell, (iiamley. Pate, Ceiiegy.
Young', Hanibright.
TENNIS TEAM membeis are:
Poindexter, Pearsall, McCutchan, Hodel, Huffaker, Martin.
SCHEDULE
Furman
Wofford
Lafayette
Cornell
Cornell
Jacksonville NAS
Jacksonville NAS
Mercer
Toledo
South Carolina
Wofford
Duke
Miami
South Carolina
The Citadel
Furman
N. C. State
Washington and Lee
William and Mary
Southern Conference
Tournament
TOP DOUBLES COMBINATION, Bob Huffaker
and Dave Pearsall, i=how winning form and quick re-
flexes.
Tennis
The Promised Land was at hand. After the long
haul back up the tennis ladder, Davidson netmen
now stood again at the threshold of Southern
Conference supremacy. Coach Dick McKee found
himself loaded with aces — his only problem was
how to play his hand.
Bob Huffaker, Dave Pearsall, Semi Mintz, Mike
Martin, John Poindexter, Tom McCutchan, Harry
Broome, Dick Hodel — these were the ones who
had borne McKee along the upward way, and
from these must come the right combination that
would make the Wildcat KING in the land of cat-
gut and fuzzed sphere.
Coach DICK McKEE in action.
i^
Soccer
SCilKDn.K
Duke
IMVitT.T
W'ashiiiKton and l>ee
N. r. State
University of N. C.
Warren Wilson
Washinpton and Lee
Pfeiflfer
Coachfs .\h( I 'ICHAN find M A KK( )'l TK with ra|it:
ROSS SMYTH.
In their second season of intercollegiate play,
the Davidson soccer team, under the tutelage of
coaches McCutchan and Marrotte, acquitted
themselves quite well, with a 4-5 record apainst
some of the top teams in the rejjion.
Openinjr apainst Duke, the hooters made a
pleasinp showinp (lesi)ite a 4-1 defeat at the hands
of the powerful Blue Devils. The followinp week
the 'Cats found themselves smashing PfeifTer with
an easy 5-0 win. It was three days later that they
really proved their mettle when they edped Wash-
inpton and Lee, 2-L on an overtime poal by cap-
tain Ro.ss Smyth.
Yet the tide soon chanped much to the team's
dismay. N. C. State, with brilliant midfield con-
trol, dealt a 3-0 loss to start the eipht ball rollinp.
Within a span of eipht days, Warren Wil.son
toppled the 'Cats by 4-2, North Carolina took a
2-0 shutout win, and Washinpton and Lee avenped
the earlier loss, 4-L
Quickly bouncinp back with another drubbinp
of Pfeiffer. "the toe and head booters" clo.sed out
the '57 cami)aipn with a "Homecominp" victory
over Warren Wilson.
Pete Andrews, sturdy halfljack. and Claude Fin-
ney, freshman poalie, nabbed berths on the All-
Southern .soccer team in recopnition of their play
durinp the .sea.son. Other repulars cited durinp
the year for outstandinp effort included Mike
Lauphlin, John Keiter, Gordon Neville, Koopie
Kwon, Sam Smith, Ward McKeithen, John Kuy-
kendall, and captain Smyth.
SOCCER TEAM members are:
First low: Price, Irvin, P., Irvin, E., McKeithen, Smyth, Keiter, Neville, Dulaney,
Laufrhlin. Sicotid row: Coach Marrotte, Greene, Hoagland, Hoplins, Smith, FoUmer,
Kwon, Andrews, McClure, Coach McCutchan. Third roiv: Scott, Pharr, Powell, Shive,
Kuykendall, Clarke, Reed.
Cross Country
""llllllinilii:.
Captain ANGUS McBRYDE
As limber-lepKed aspirants of the cross country race stretched their
limbs across the 1957 season, the Davidson harriers found their stride
somewhat shortened by factors varying from lack of conditioning
to the crippling aspects of the Asiatic flu.
Captain Angus McBryde headed the Wildcat contingent, placing
among the top finishers in every meet. Most pleasing of McBryde's
mates were sophomores Jim Alexander and Graham George, who
invariably filled the second and third finishing slots for Davidson.
Backing up these front runners were Ray Antley, Bill Deane, Waller
Taylor, and Al MacKay.
After opening the season against a tough Wake Forest crew who
managed to capture four of the first places, the 'Cats bumped into
powerful Duke, Richmond, V.M.I., and Washington and Lee — the lat-
ter two in a triangular afl'air. Only the Generals stumbled in behind
the locals.
Following the regular schedule, Davidson participated in the State
meet at Raleigh and the Southern Conference meet, which, unfor-
tunately, saw William and Mary win for the third consecutive season.
SCHEDULE
Washington and Lee
Wake Forest
Duke
N. C. State and William and Mary
Richmond
Wake Forest
CROSS COUNTRY TEAM members are:
Coach Whittle, Cole, George, Alexander, Bridgers, MacKay, Deane, Young.
W KESTLINC; TKAM members are:
Firnl i-(iw: iMclntyie, Taylor, Kinu, Cee, May, Lanipley. Siratid row: Fapp, Neale,
Thompson, Allen, (Irif fin,' Pitts, Westcrvelt, Yarlmuieh.
Wrestlir
"Westy and the Seven Dwarfs" mijrht well be
the label of the 1958 wrestlinjr campaign. Not
to slijrht the efforts of other capable Davidson
mat men, Harold Westervelt simply stood head
and shoulders above the pack in jrrapplinK to an
undefeated .season en route to defense of his con-
ference title. Yet the "Seven Dwarfs" did an ad-
mirable job in holdinjr down their part of the
bargain.
Captain Dave FajrK held the heavy end of the
order, followed by Richie Kinjr in the 177 pound
l)racket. GeorKe Rhyne shared the 157 pound slot
with Westervelt.
Milton Gee, capable sophomore ace, handled
anythinji from 187-157 pounds. Butch Neale, Wal-
ler Taylor, and Charlie Lampley participated in
the 147 and 137 pound matches.
Competition in the lower weijrhts was also keen
with Bobby Mclntyre. Bob Schacter, R. I). Hall,
and Harri.son May .scrapping for the 130 and 127
pound slots.
The year turned out to be an interesting one,
for Parker and his boys had truly jriven the fans
.something for their money.
SCHEDULE
University of North Carolina
Pfeiffer
N. C. State
V. M. I.
The Citadel
Wake Forest
V. P. I.
WashinKton and Lee
Coach CHARLIE I'ARKEK
and Captain DAVE FAGG.
SWIMMING TEAM members are:
First row: Russell, Scott, Ray, Wynii, LeGrand. Second row: Bell, Smith, Gable, Shaw,
Morcock, Miller, Jones, Hellier, Hudgiiis, Rose.
Swimming
Youth was the theme of this year's edition of
"Davidson Tank Fortunes," as coach George
Thompson's mermen wrote a 5-6 entry into the
books. Highlighting the youth movement was the
showing of freshman freestyler Tom Hudgins,
the Greensboro, N. C, native who cruised into
varsity records in both the 220- and 440-yard
events during the year. Sophomore John Scott
was another consistent winner in the breaststroke
events. Even as a freshman last season, Scott had
posted his name on the record books.
Captain Fritz Russell, backstroke specialist,
found himself pushed by fast-improving soph
Tommy Smith. Other second year standouts were
Art Miller and Joe Bell. Freestylers Bob Wynne
and frosh George Gable also proved consistent
point-makers in their events.
With an abundance of talent expected to return
next year, Davidson could indeed anticipate great
things from Thompson and his men.
Captain FRITZ RUSSELL and Coach GEORGE THOMPSON.
SCHEDULE
William and Mary
Catholic University
V.M.I.
Washington and Lee
Wake Forest
Clemson
V.P.L
Georgia
Emory
The Citadel
University of South Carolina
Golf
With rri'slinian W'fiicr Sl;iiilc.\. t'oiiucr .M\'ers
Park aco, wit-liliiivr tin- hottost (.-liili, tin- Davidson
jrolf team forjri'd across tlu' IDfiS links with one
of thf stroiiKi'st lint'iiiis in rt'Cfiit years. Hackinjr
Stanley were live veterans sophomores (lary
Heeseman and Sut Alexander, jnniors Sam Sloan
and Buckey Dennis, and senior Ned Payne. Look-
ing at this line-up one could .see that the .scpiad
had reason to maintain hijrh hopes of hetterin^r
the G-G record of last season.
All MIk Four teams were included on the Wild-
cat slate, as Wake Forest and North ('arolin;i
formed the opposition twice and N. ('. State and
Duke once apiece. The season was toi)i)ed off hy
trips to the Southern IntercoUejriate Tournament
at Athens, Ga., and the Southern Conference tour-
nament on May 6-7.
Coach TOM SCOTT takes out a few moments from
office work.
SCHEDULE
University of North Carolina
Wake Forest
Furman
Ohio
University of North Carolina
Duke
Wake Forest
N. C. State
(;()l.l' IKAM mombers are:
Hce.seman, Stanley, Sloan, Dennis, Feezor (kneeling), Mackorell, Paine.
Pflije One Hundred Thirty-seven
Baseball
SCHEDULE
Lenoir Rhyne
Lenoir Rhyne
Catawba
Yale
Yale
Washington and Lee
William and Mary
Georgia Teacher's College
Mercer
The Citadel
The Citadel
Mercer
Furman
V. M. L
Furman
V. P. L
Coach TOM STEVENS and cap-
tain SHELBOURNE WALLACE.
As outstanding baseball teams are not a tra-
dition at Davidson, no one looked to coach Tom
Stevens to turn out a championship squad this
year. The Wildcat nine did, however, manage to
furnish the sports scene with an improved ver-
sion of diamond tactics following a dismal 6-15
mark a year ago.
The mound staff, which found itself labelled
the 'key' to the season, was headed by four re-
turnees— seniors Allen Moore and Dave Page,
junior Dee Lide, and sophomore Dee Green.
George Hart, handling the most power-laden
bat of the squad, returned to the first base post.
The keystone sack became accustomed to the sight
of a new face — frosh Russ Cotton. Able Don Kil-
lian again scooped 'em up at short, and John Pat-
terson set up shop at the hot corner. Harold Rea-
gan, a freshman star two years ago, returned
after a year to perform the receiving chores.
ACTION during practice sessions shows the 'Cats
ready for a new year.
SLUGGER George ll.i.i
'I'l'iini i';i|)t;iiii Slu'llinuiiic W'alhuT Wiis
joiiu'd in tlu' oiitfu-ld l>y Richmond Riirkor
and Mill .loyiu'r. Paj^i' and (Jn-cn wci-f hor-
rowi'd intorniittcntly frdin tiic pitcliiiiK civw
to siipi)ort this unit.
Tho youth of the team opcnod now vistas
of hope for Wildcat supporters as they looked
to next year and the one after to he the cul-
mination of a period that should lead David-
son to the realm of an unsurpassable record.
Tor l'irC'llKI{S PiiKi' and Muuro waini-up fioin the mound.
OITFIKLDEKS Groom,
Wallace and Green clo.se
in to snare a lonjr one.
If.ASEB.M.L TE.\M members are:
Firxt >(>ir: Wallace, Pane, Greene, Henderson, Killian, KeaKan, I'attcrson, (Jiooni,
Rucker. Srcaml roir.- Beckham, Moore, White, ('otton. Hart, .Joyner, .Stiiait. '.idc. I'havT-.
[Untrdiiri".
''There is a destiny that
makes ns brothers;
None goes his ivay alone.
— Edwin Markham
Davidson College's vei'sion of the ancient Greek mys-
tery cults conducted various ceremonies during the
year, and their rites always created an interest among
our number. The rather full outlay of social and hon-
orary fraternities wrecked the study schedules and
planned budgets. Nevertheless, this was the manifesta-
tion of what was called "brotherhood," and Davidson
seemed to thrive upon it.
Rush Week was the most intensive campaign of psy-
chological warfare, brainwashing, and the playing of
the calculated risk which anyone had ever seen. It was
climaxed by Pledge Day, characterized by fitful waits,
discouraging rain, and eventual exultation. The final
result witnessed the triumph of those Rush Week ele-
ments, Joy and or Rationalization. Pledges soon learn-
ed, however, that all that glittered was not necessarily
fraternity pins. Shoes and cars must gleam just as
brightly.
Bob Jones guided a progressive IFC which proposed
several notable changes in fraternity life. They con-
sidered an earlier Rush Week, a better coordinated
Hell Week, and preferential bidding. The IFC super-
vised the Barium Springs party when everyone re-dis-
covered how wonderful Christmas could be when you
had not yet become cynical.
. . . jjsijcli()l(i(jicu1 irarfofc. hraiii-
icashing, and the pliuiiiitj of the
calculated lisk . . .
PLEDGE DAY — characterized by fitful
icaits, discouraging rain, and eventual ex-
ultation.
. . . everyone re-dis-
covered how wonderful
CHRISTMAS could be...
All ill I II
The l)iKKt-''^t dt'vi'lopnuMit of tlu' year was tlic const riic-
tion of the new fraternitN court. 'I'he location was ([iiite
appropriate — 250 yards east of the Broken Anchor and
only 75 yards southwest of the goU course.
A larjre crowd ^J'thered in the Union on the evening
when Dr. McCiavock talked al)out Patterson Coui't and
supervised the drawin^r for lot and hou.se desiKH. The
KA's particularly liked the .scene from their front yard,
but the path from the rear of the Kappa Sijjf house was
the most interesting item of all. It was K"<>d to welcome
the Sijrma Nus into the court also.
The con.struction bejian in earnest, but .soon it seemed
to drajr, as everyone looked continually to see if and when
his fraternity hou.se would be completed. After Chri.stmas
the Pi Kapi)s especially looked forward to their new
hou.se.
The furor of furnishing confronted everyone. This
resulted in numerous letters, cii'culars. telei)hone calls,
and i)ers()nai i)ieas to alumni, parents, friends. P'rom the
shaved budgets and the personal jrifts, from Iji-others'
dreams and administrator's actions, there emerged the
proud reality of the Patterson Fraternity Court.
•Hit^^j^tf
lunl tin I illvrgvlici
PATTERSOX Fh'AThnMTY COURT.
Page One Hundred Forty three
A lout weekend
Disappoiniment ii'as ineritabh
As always, the principal activity of the Interfraternity Coun-
cil centered on the three dance weekends. Under the direction
of Jimmy Jones, chairman of the decoration committee, the at-
mosphere for the familiar rhythmic revolutions was always most
appealing.
Everyone was prepared "to trip the light fantastic" in late
October, but we tripped on the Asian flu instead. These were
among the darkest hours in Davidson history. The IFC, how-
ever, enabled Davidsonians to recover their lost prestige quickly
with Homecoming II which was complete in every detail —
including the endless precipitation.
Fortified by experience, the Davidson gentleman was ready
for almost anything as he anticipated Midwinters. The familiar
letters delivered their purple blows, and a few spent sweating
minutes in a telephone booth, trying to recoup their campaign.
Mid-Winters appropriately fell on Valentine's Day, and the
snow did too. As white manna fallen from heaven, the snow
interfered considerably with the circuits of Mr. Linker.
April brought Spring Frolics and the most carefree weekend
of all. The golf course and outlying woods beckoned to many
couples. Others went to the river, the beach, the mountains.
A few attended the dances.
ijet Jones and his cohorts
qvickhj began again.
liji I) rim niilitdiji jirntDcol
The honorary fraternities continued to recojrnize indi-
vidual accomplishment throughout the year. The initiation
fee for these organizations purchased a key which at least
the undergraduate did not dare aflix to an ostentatious
chain. lUit others did.
There were other bargains which that fee purchased
also — a miniature billboard which advertised distinction
on the dormitory wall, another picture in the annual, a
half line under the .senior picture, and above all, the smug-
ness of self-satisfaction.
By prim military protocol, by manual violence, and by
quiet letter, the.se men were called forth from their edu-
cational pursuits and were formally initiated into their
respective yi'oups.
by manual riolcnct .
. . . and by quiet letter,
THE HONORED were
formally initiated into
their respective (/roups.
Interfraternity
OFFICERS
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Bob Jones
..._.Pat Woodward
Don Carmichael
Bob Jones, President
Precedents irere
shattered as Midivinters brdiu/lit tiro dance hands to
the enthusiastic crowds.
M
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Page One Hmidred Forty-six
Council
I'nder the competent leadership of liob Jones,
and the capalile assistance in linanciai and sec-
retarial matters of Don Carmichael and Pat
Woodward, the Interfraternity Council steered
the student body through another hijrhly success-
ful social season. The tine record achieved by the
council was brought about through the close co-
operation of the twelve members, representing'
every social fraternity on campus.
The first event of the year, rush week, was
jfuided to its termination with a minimum of con-
fusion. Hayden Hollin>rsworth and Charlie Stowe
made a joint evaluation of this "longest week of
the year," out of which came plans for a revised
and earlier starting rush program for 1958.
Homecoming, which was to be held in late Octo-
ber, was postponed due to the local flu epidemic.
Not to be dismayed, the council manaKed to sneak
an "Asiatic" weekend into the .schedule in No-
vember, with Claude Thornhill and his orchestra
furnishing the merry music. The fall blood drive,
headed i)y Charles Woods, and the annual Barium
Springs Christmas party pointed up the more
.serious side of Davidson fraternity life.
Second .semester jrot off to a Rood start with the
Mid- Winters weekend turning out to be a "winter
carnival." It can be .said that much snow fell on
this new and special kind of dance weekend on
the Davidson campus, when we were privileged
to have l)oth the bands of Buddy Morrow and
Ralph Marterie. Hell week, enjoyed by all. was
shortened this year, Kivin^ some relief to pledges
on the verfre of becoming brothers. The work of
the 1957-58 council was brought to a clo.se with
Spring Frolics, for which Lester Lanin furnished
the music. Jim Jones did a fine job all year lon^
in planning and coordinating decorations for the
ilances. as did al.so Dee Lide in making housing
arrangements for the weekends.
Another important aspect of the year for the
social fraternities was the gradual development
of the new Patterson Fraternity Court. Frater-
nity presidents drew for sites early in the year,
and throujrhout the remainder of the year the
Interfraternity Council aided in the settlement
of situations which arose in connection with this
new court.
The Interfraternity Council has come to be
more than a mere special committee and its mem-
bers more than ju.st "the Kuys in the dance figure.''
It has been, as well, the Ki'oup governing the fra-
ternities in a well-coordinated system and rep-
resenting the fraternities, as it formulated and
carried out plans for the combined efforts of
these organizations.
WlKMiWAKI), (AH.MIl ilAKL, A.\l> J(I.Sb.S
K^SKlSATi
Andefson HrLi.iNTswonTM .Jo.ves
Kemmefer bii;E Shore
Stowe Tiiask Wocr.s
Paee One Hiiiulred Forty ieven
North Carolina Epsilon Omega Chapter of
Alpha Tau Omega
Founded 1865
Established 1950
The Tans came marching back in September
filled with tales of wild summer exploits and buz-
zard-battling. Traviss had lost his pin somewhere
in Atlanta and Ralph Sloan was leading the week-
ly V-W caravan to Salem's citadel of beauty.
Two days of wading in mud and grass seed,
along with Livingston's hanging from the eaves,
got the house clean for Rush Week. Carmichael
never found the right word, and Bagg still doesn't
know why we eat at Tau Inn, but seventeen sturdy
men in life rafts and rowboats turned in at the
Maltese Cross. They showed their stuff at the
pledge party that night by holding their own
against the brothers in the "snake pit," a smooth
crew! Martin got a little too smooth. What the
heck do ya do with two Homecoming dates?
Bru's brick brothel got the shaft at Homecom-
ing with all other plans. When the dance weekend
did come, a couple of making-up-for-lo.st-time
parties came with it. Brother Chapman stuck
cigars in the open mouths at Sunday night sup-
per. Chapman? pinned?
The Taus found girls from every port at the
fall function. "Oh hell, I can't see a damn thing!"
Lloyd Chapin, President
The pledges' skit was different. Has anybody seen
my date? Sally and Ron highlighted a real cool
party.
Meanwhile, back at the campus, the pledges
were learning their trade in a moonlight shoe-
shining session, while Patton and Lewis were win-
ning their places on the all-fraternity flicker ball
team. The pressure of last minute reviews sent
the boys up the road to give a party for a reluctant
Sam. With Thrailkill's planning, the Barium
Springs party perfectly set the mood for Christ-
mas.
Back from vacation, Whitesell's bare chest
promised more cigars. A surprise party for the
wanderers caught Fizz with no place to run and
gave Dave a "very appropriate' present. Stanton
ju.st don't know what to say. Senor Misle became
brother Misle after exams; he's finally learned
to "speek Angleesh."
March brought Help Week and the last of the
shaping-up process. The Founder's Day-Pledge
Banquet ended the week of work and the year
of training for the pledges. Frosty Gilbert's pa-
tient, enduring efforts to develop seventeen "het-
erogeneous" freshmen into real Taus climaxed
in initiation, and for these men. Alpha Tau Omega
became more than a name, and brotherhood more
than a word. Lewis' new budget was finagled
into an extra blast, but Sam wasn't invited. The
basketball team even got new uniforms — it made
'em the terror of the court.
This was the year pug-nosed tuffy Benson took
charge of college football, and Pope Chapin inter-
preted the go.spel (liberally, of course) to the
faithful. It was a unique year for ATO; Patton
made it through the blood drive. Braswell won
the "best-dressed at fraternity meetings" cup
from Long, Flash put the batmobile into bus serv-
ice, and chess began to challenge bridge as the
national pastime.
Spring Frolics, The White Tea Rose Ball, and,
finally. Commencement brought the end of the
year. So reluctantly the battered door was closed
for the last time; the chilly trek to Cornelius
three times a day was gone forever ; and the gang
confidently turned its gaze and its steps to a new
house and a new year.
0, Lord. I want to be in that number,
when the Taus go marching . . .
Pnsidoif
OFFICP]RS
Lloyd Ciiai'in
m T *
Vicc-Frcsidcnt
Secret aril
Roy Gilbekt
Tom Tiiraiukill
1
Treot^iirer
Ed Lewis
■
Miss Sallie McSwain
Queens Col lege
Sweetheart of Alpha Tan Omega
TIk Tdi's pi/Iit tl/i ir icdii to (Uhitlur rirforii.
Page One Hundred Forlynine
Axn
'Tiras a great daij
for the Tau's
'Wliat do yoii mean,
'Don't eat at the
Tau house ?' "
The new house of
N. C. Epsilon Omega
Chapter.
^s?^\ J^^Jtf -•
Benson
Braswell
Bruhaker
Cnrmichnol
Carter
Chapin
Chapman
Cornwell
DuPuis
Gould
Grant
Hardnian
Hnrdv
Hellier
Hunt
KelloKK
Kersey
Kinihall
Lanford
Lewis
Livingston
McNeill
MacKav
Maiiior
Markee
Martin
Maxwell
Mayfield
Misle
Mitcheni
Moore
Morris
Overall
Owens
Patton
Rich
Ritchie
Roberts
Samuels
Smith, R. C.
Smith, R. K.
Smj-th
Stanton
Stevens
Tavlor
Thiailkill
Traviss
Walter
Ward
White
Whitesell
Wonieldorf
Wilson
Wright
ih&i:TE^r^,^&\5B^irii&7i
Page One Hundred Fifty-one
Phi Alpha Chapter of
Beta Theta Pi
Founded 1839 Established 1858
With the coming of September and the end of
summer vacation, fifty-five Phi Alpha Betas i-e-
turned to Davidson from all corners of the nation.
Summer activities had included numerous pas-
times, from pea-picking in Washington state to
academic study abroad.
Rush Chairman Laurens Walker, however, im-
mediately reminded the brothers of the work at
hand. Rush season was here again and the round
of parties including shrimp dip and balling ses-
sions. Vice-President George Hemingway was
soon to have an excellent pledge class of sixteen
barbarians under his wing.
This meant the annual pledge program includ-
ing shoe-shining, push-ups, and fire-building. The
pledges were led by Goat Chief Wesley Weeks.
Shower baths were also included in the agenda;
the recipients, however, being brothers instead
of pledges.
Bill Bonpurant, Prpsi(lr»t
Homecoming was next in order, but the black
plague caused the gala events to be postponed
for a few weeks. Finally Thornhill arrived, along
with our dates from Scott, Queens, Converse,
W.C, and Coker. Another social event which will
long be remembered was the fall function and
Dr. Davidson's speech.
After Christmas, study time returned as we
faced exams. The midnight oil was burned and
much coffee was consumed.
Fraternity athletics were of great importance
and interest as Brothers Riggs, Diggs, Wilsey,
and Irvin upheld Phi Alpha's honor as men of
might on the wrestling mat. The varsity .soccer
team was dominated by Clark, McKeithen. the
two Irvins, Neville, and Charlie Reed.
With the coming of spring, our impressive ini-
tiation was held and the brotherhood was brought
to seventy strong. Now our thoughts turned to
Spring Frolics, which was followed by the in-
formal function, reminding us that graduation
was .soon at hand, and the beach party.
Many incidentals will be remembered about the
year 1957-58 : the Sunday night feeds . . . Fry's
experiences in the mountains . . . Avinger's phone
bill . . . still the old remembrances of Eb and Liz
. . . Chapman, Shaw, and Rutherford on the hunt
. . . Taylor's motel . . . Rucker's visit to Coker . . .
Reynolds and his assignment for the pledges . . .
Lynn, our Beta Sweetheart . . .
Looking back over nine months of successes,
we acknowledge with appreciation the service and
ability of the ringma.ster. President Bill Bondu-
rant.
OFFICERS
Pnsithnt IJii.i. r.osni'KANT
Vice-President Ckorc.k Hkmincway
Secretanj Davk Rohinson
Treasurer Kl) IKVIN
Miss Lynn Bi.alock
Salem ColleRe
Swcclhrarl of flrta Thrta I'i
The TV rliih holds its nif/htlii meetinf)
Page One Hundred Fifty -three
Ben
"/ do s'o hclieve
i)i WoogUn!"
The slave driver
reigns supreme.
"Richards, ijoii ain't
shahp enough!'
Aslmiv
AiisU-ll
AviiikriT
Kcckliaiii
Miitutuiunt
Ciiitrr
C'lltlT
riiiipinaii
Colvin
Dnitoii
Davis
lU-aiu'. T. I.
Doane. VV. F
P'arubow
Fry
Cli'iiii
( liamli'V
liwathiiioy
llamiltoii
Hi'minpwav
Holt
Irviii, D. A.
Irvin, K. L.
Keiter
Lampley
Lane
LeMaster
Mclntvro
MiKiM'tlifii. A. \V.
McKeitluMi, K. .M
McLain
Martin
Massey
Meyer
Millner
Morgan
Neville
Oliver
Pinkney
Price
Renfro
Richards
RiKKS
Robinson
Rose
Rucker
Rustin
Scott
Shaw
Shoffner
Spaugh
Stuart
Walker
Wel)ber
Weeks
Wilsey
Wilson
Woods
Page One Hundred Fifty-five
Sigma Chapter of
'■^V^^ll«>l)j.;^^ti.,■
Kappa Alpha
Founded 1865 Established 1880
Under the direction of Buddha Bill, upholder
of the mysteries, and "hey-chief" Austin, custo-
dian of video vocations, Sigma again set forth
to face the rigors of higher education.
Apple pie in hand, brother Morgan and brother
Austin ("Now this lad has character, but does he
watch Wyatt Earp?") culled the cream of the
freshman class to the tune of eighteen shiny new
pledges. Wild Man Wilder and Company added
their two bits to the future of the chapter by
bringing yet another "K.A. to be" into the world.
The social year was initiated by a string of
brother-pledge "parties"; it was then that the
poor plebes received their first experience (so to
speak) with the "Queens Blind Date" ("Aw.
you're kiddin', that's iinj date!"). But by the time
late Homecoming finally aced out the T. Z. Koo
flu, the younger generation of Sigma smoothies
was well on the way to a new mark for breaking
heai'ts.
5lLL POMEROY, Prcstdoif
V
"My kingdom for some wheels." was a missing
sound for the first time in memory. Two brothers
per car — not counting Spook's unidentified con-
veyance— made the secular life much easier for
all".
Just as Dapper Dave's men collected the flicker-
ball title, winter closed in. Christmas came and so
did the party for the Barium Springers ("Mister,
are you really a 'spider'?"). Before the shock of
returning to the less-than-festive campus could
wear off. exams (Bull Run) hit the troops; but
wonder of wonders, all survived. Midwinters was
Pizza pie and combo time. Old South came before
we could recuperate from Spring vacation — the
terrible terrors also became brothers in early
March to assist in the fray — but the knights re-
covered without undo difficulty ("Has anybody
seen my sword?"). Spring Frolics marked the
end of the official social season, with a record of
four terrific wins and no losses.
The traditional journey to the sea followed
graduation : the class of 1958 was meeting for
the last time. Could there ever again be : a Snoot
swishing ... a Harris-tweed money bag ... a
West Va. Major with an Ivy League swagger
stick ... a Johnny-God with a Valhalla in the
Calhoun .state ... a soldier of fortunes named
Turner ... an esthetic couple named Bill and
Gwendolyn ?
What would Kappa Alpha have been without : a
Gator driving his car ... a Van without his rose
bed ... an Antley who wasn't washin' ... a
Shelbourne not on his way to Tenn. ... a Locke
who wasn't snowed ... a Night without a "Have
you heard the one about ..."... a Charlie Mac
not making money?
The Grand Old Gang shall never again be ex-
actly the same; but the spirit and common bond
will remain down through the years.
OFFICERS
President I'.ii.i. Pomeroy
Vice-Pretiident Shelboukne Wallack
Secretary LoCKE CARTER
Treaxiirer Howard Persincer
Mrs. Van Wood
Davidson, North Carulina
Kaj>iJii Alpha Rose
Shades of Scarlet O'Hara (and Traveler, tn,.'
^""^^^Vg
Piige One Hundred Fifly-ieven
KA
Ignore that damn Fed!
Nice trij, though.
Well, aonwhodifU
hare fo tiif)i it on!
AldridKP
Allen
Antlcy
Austin
Hluluck
CuitiT. C. K.
("aitfi. I,. Y.
(' 111 w ford
Dui'Kiiii
DfVrii's
Dunnway
Kdwiiids
KerKiison, II. M.
FVrtru.son. W. I..
Ciiiines
linyle
CriiT
Harris
Hunter
James
Jones
I.athan
I.oftin
Mctiowan
McLean
McLendon
Mason
Morgan
Morris
Nelnis
Nix
Padgett
Page
Pavne, E. M.
Payne, P. W.
Persiiiger
Pickard
Pitts
Pleasants
Pomeroy
Purks
Ranisev
Redding
Redmond
Rhame
Richardson
Rucker
Ruggles
Stewart
Streetman
Trask
Turner
Wallace
Wearn
West
Wilder
Wilkerson
Wylie
Zimmerman
if^^^mmSSiYmk'
Page One ilinuircil Fiji) uiiie
Delta Chapter of
Kappa Sigma
Founded 1869 Established 1890
Summer began with a blast at the beach with
"Suitcase" adding his bit and Bobo's tangle with
the Coast Guard. While most of us had the East
Coast pretty well covered, "Curly" journeyed
West to become a pea-picker (word got out that
he dropped a few toads in Vegas) .
With the coming of September came football
and Rush Week. "Cochise," Setzler, "Chug," War-
den, and McCuUough covered the ground while
Biggers, James, Bloomfield, Smith, and Porter
opened the holes. Craig pulled down the top pass
receiving spot in the conference. Sloan came
through with a fine pledge class, and King and
Sasser showed them the ropes.
"C.T.," "J.G.," and "K.P." had the job of run-
ning the military while Watts headed the Honor
Platoon . . . Homecoming came and so did the
flu . . . All along the roses had been going out
and the cigars coming in as Greene, Owen, Hunni-
GARY MAYNARD, Pl-CSidcilt
cutt, Johnson, Sterling, and Biggers vowed away
their Star and Crescent.
In honor of our pledges, the annual Black and
White Ball was held at the Baringer. "Little
Wheels" made a fine Master of Ceremonies, and
"Henry" really beamed as the Sweetheart was
presented.
Christmas brought the kids from Barium
Springs, and "Super Cool" was taken to the
cleaners in poker by one of the youngsters . . .
"Brownie" was voted president of the T\' club
with "Hoodlum" and "Spook" running him a close
race . . . The pledges gave a fine party at Hattie's
with King and "Mick" providing entertainment
with a fish eating contest . . . Over the holidays
wedding bells rang for Jerry and Libby . . . Street,
Biggers, and Sasser led the way to the I.F.C.
wrestling crown.
Exams came and went, and then as Mid-Winters
descended, life picked up again. Hell Week soon
followed with the usual burlap, eggs, exercises,
and good fellowship. The rains came, but finally
they gave way to sunny April skies. With the
sun came Spring Frolics and the usual festivities.
Through it all, "Doc" and Gilmour were constant-
ly on the lookout for "fresh fish."
Ottie and his "Anybody got any board money?"
was heard every week it seemed. "Ma" caught her
share of disparaging remarks, and "Shep,"
"Smoothy," "Smiley," and the boys gave out with
the cheerful service.
All in all this last year in the house on the cor-
ner has been a profitable one. Next year we will
be in the new fraternity court, but Kappa Sigma
will still be the same . . .
Happy were we met,
Happy have we been,
Happy did we part,
And shall happy meet again.
OFFICERS
President Gary Maynard
Vice-President Marshall Sasser
Secretary Sam Sloan
Treasurer. Crak; Wall
Miis. Jerry Greene
Charlotte, North Carolina
Sweetheart of Ku]>im Siffiiia
ParfK
Page One Hundred Sixty -one
KZ
Ain't no
flie^ on IIS.
When dues Gilmore get
out of the infi)-manj?
I told ijoii not
to call me "fattij.
Armfii'ld
Kukcr
Kurhoe
Rernhurdt
Kymmi
Clark
Col.-
CultMiiaii
Cook
Croom
Crouch
Davis
Kdwanis
^^Sv^^'irjS&r^SEiiStiiiK
Koifsler
Francis
Funderliurk
(i rot' lie
(Hcy
Hanier
Henderson, C
Henderson, R. M.
Hodires
Houser
Hulint;
James
.lohnsttin
Kellv
Kintr
Kizer
I. a Far
I.uke
I.awinjT
I.onjr
Lynn
McClure
McCullouKh
McCutchen
McGuirt
McNeill
MacQueen
Martin
Maynard
Morrison
Pearsall
Porter
I'owell
Price
Purkett
Quantz, A. T.
Quantz, N. G.
Richmond
San ford
Sasser
Setzler
Sloan
Smith
Stanley
Sterling:
Stowe
Taylor
Wall
Warden
WatU
Wyche
AVynne
th
Page One Hundred Sixty-three
E
North Carolina Gamma Chapter of
Phi Delta Theta
Founded 1848 Established 1928
September found fifty-three knights of the
Sword and Shield returning from pea factory,
sunny south, and Yankeeland once more to set
sail on the good ship Phi, under skipper Johnny
Johnson . . . Bryan and Bassett had led the sum-
mer romance department . . .
Rush Week came and went, and Pallas emerged
the adopted mother of twenty-six new owlets,
among whom we found another Sugar D., a Fresh-
man Council prexy, quite a few- athletes, and even
some scholars . . . "Moppy Floppy" swiped Dave's
pins and our hearts to become our Sweetheart
and help begin our voyage . . . Herr Lewis reigned
over the mess hall and the freshman class . . .
P.U. kept us in the good graces of the I.F.C.
"Frosty" led the way to Bakhtiar and the blues
. . . Cum Claude, the rains, and the dance week-
end went by the boards, to be followed a little
later by the bopping in of the Roaring Twenties,
Johnny Johnson, President
^^
despite the efforts of Peanuts, Nomad, and the
boys . . .
Between weekends we usually managed to
squeeze in five or six days of labor. Phis seemed
to have a knack for starring in such fields as
ROTC, geography, and "pre-medical'' courses
. . . Stewart even managed to talk Phi Beta Kappa
out of a key. . .
"Gronster" rocketed to an intramural wrestling
throne, but we had to wait until tank time for our
first I-F championship . . . Christmas, orphans,
paddles, phone calls for Bullet . . . Cutting and
Brantley without pins, us with cigars . . .
For two weeks in January, studies interfered
with our education, and then we were off again,
minus several imminent (and immaculate) Phis —
some by choice, some by chance, some by neces-
sity.
Tank plus Simp equals one cool set of wheels
. . . Four Phis carry the load for Wildcat basket-
bailers . . . Elfie and his strong-arm boy main-
tained order on Phi Hall, the scourge of the Phi-
keia. . .
Hell Week (?), and when the dust cleared, we
proudly extended the grip to a happy, worthy set
of frosh . . .
Bermuda shorts, spring fever, and exams ; the
good ship hauled into port for three months' re-
pair after another grand voyage. Looking ahead,
we see the glorious adventure of life in our new
castle — thanks to the work of "mothers" Camp-
bell and Floyd, and the aid of Mansfield's illus-
trious alumni . . . We see also, with sorrow, the
loss of lovable Misses Grace and Annie, who have
done K.P. for hundreds of Phis, over many a voy-
age.
Looking back, it wasn't the athlete, playboy, or
scholar who typified Phi Delta Theta — we had
our share of all, to be sure . . . but the happy blend
of all, together in the bond, raising our voices
in eternal praise.
OFFICERS
President
V tee-President
Secret a rij
Treasurer
John Johnson
En Stewart
RALI'H Kassktt
Bill Campbell
Miss Margaret Lee Smith
Converse Collepc
Dream Girl of I'hl [>,ll„ Thrin
U'l'll (Id nimiist atnjthiuu tn i-hn r nj) nir Sratf.
Page One Hundred Sixty-five
OAe
What'd yoH da iritli
Tankersley ?
Ain't we raisin' Hell?
Hilt, Cii})—!
AiidfiMiii
HHSSftt
Hffl.p
Hi'iitlt>y
ltcMt<in
niiikc
Kootll-
BrcHimo
Brtiwii
BroyU's
Bryan
Burns
Campbell. II. It.
(■ampl.fll. J. W.
Chaso
Cobl.
Couch
Crute
Cuttini;
Davis
Denliani
Driver
Rllis
Emmrioh
Erckman
Finch
Fisher
Floyd
Georpe
Guerrant
Harris
Harvin
Holling-sworth
Hopkins
Hopper
Huffaker
Huie
Jefferson
Johnson
Johnston
Kimbirl
Kuykendail
Lacy
Lamm
McAlister
McBrvde
Mintz
Moore
Morris
Nix
Nuckolls
Patten
Pharr
Poindexter
Ramsey
Ray
Rogers
Shinn
Smith
Snider
Sparks
Stewart
Tankersley
Thurman
Warlick
Whitley
Wilson
Wood
Wiwdmansee
Woodward
Young
Page One Hundred Sixty-seven
Delta Kappa Chapter of
ira-, . •w^Mav.--.-. . -^itfy^^^-jiffff^ ■ -.-■,p. -^^tr^^
*.rA.
Phi Gamma Delta
Founded 1848 Established 1923
Fijiland :
Crescent Beach and a blast . . . the combo
. . . 'Morning, Lad . . . Groundhog . . . "So here's
to those who from us part." . . . Summer's frolics
. . . Dave and Barbara — and eight weeks of Navy
life . . . Guyton and Jane . . . Bill and Frankie
engaged . . . also Joe and Mary Ann . . . Wil-
kinson edits another masterpiece . . . Pessimism :
"Please, fellows, write!'' . . . Academy? What
academy? . . . back to Davidson. Hi Wetback!
. . . Sloan and Paree . . . Welcome, Mrs. Spangler
. . . Jones opens Rush Week . . . "What's this black
spot on my name-card for?" . . . "how'd you like
to be a friend of ours?" ... 21 affirmative replies
. . . the Pledge Banquet and the Bamboo Room
. . . settling down to routine : classes, labs, pledge
training, flickerball, and Hattie's . . . I.F.C. lot-
tery . . . Lucky 13 . . . football, with Fagg lead-
ing . . . Watwood, House, Smith, and Simpson
. . . Wednesday night fraternity meetings . . .
the V.P.L game, P.J.'s, and charcoaled steaks . . .
Asian flu vs. Homecoming . . . Fijis head for
Bubble's "cabin" . . . snowv fairvland . . . but
Dave Fagg, President
'*« ^.
who forgot the heat and water? . . . Engh and
Smoothie — hayride and party in Virginia . . . the
slave quarters . . . Boyd needs a new wardrobe
. . . P.D. and T.D. join the ranks . . . Hattie's
and the songfest . . . beer and buttermilk . . .
'Bye Thad . . . Homecoming Lost and Home-
coming Regained . . . the map to Hattie's cabin
and the keg . . . "We're poor white owls who
have lost our way. Hoot. Hoot. Hoot." . . . the
fabulous combo at Lake Lynn . . . the track
meet . . . Thanksgiving . . . Williford usurps
J.G.P.T. . . . "May I have your autograph?"
. . . Hear no evil. See no evil. Tell all evil . . .
Fagg captains wrestling team . . . Taylor and
Hall ... an innovation : Sputnik parties . . .
Barium Springs Party . . . Fiji Sweetheart; Mrs.
Spangler . . . Merry Christmas . . . Hut gives
William Violet "the" diamond . . . Santa brings
"E" a muffler . . . Happy New Year in Hender-
son . . . giggle-belly . . . the Pledge Dance . . .
Armstrong and Company . . . Goose prophesies
. . . "No music? Well, we'll have to improvise
— Alouette — !" . . . Exams . . . Tom and Mary
Lee tie the knot . . . Mid-Winters . . . P.J.'s cock-
tail partv . . . Lake Lvnn and combo, again . . .
Hell Week ... the "fold " . . . "A, sir, GOAT,
sir, IS, sir — " . . . Retaliation . . . Initiation
. . . Celebration . . . "Anyone want a fish bowl?"
. . . alumni relations . . . Seawell and Dallas,
Interior Decorators Extraordinary . . . The Ex-
odus, an annual affair . . . Spring Frolics . . .
Blowing Rock or Bust ! . . . and Lake Lynn . . .
Fiji Island . . . bermudas, sarongs, and Fiji Is-
land Punch . . . the mood of the Islands reigns
. . . the river and exams . . . and return to the
beach, "from whence we came."
"When college songs and college leis
Have faded with their Maker's days,
A\'hen Sol's swift wheels have made us old,
And college life's a tale that's told.
Phi Gamma Delta, still to thee.
Our hearts wil turn eternallv."
OFFICERS
President Dave Facg
Vice-President Henry C.RIFKIN
Recording Secretary John Toumaras
Correspondinn St crctarii GENE LONC
Micij. Uave Fago
High Point, North Carolina
Sweethriirt <if I'hi (jnmmn Prlta
First in line: from one Fiji to another.
Page One Hundred Sixlynine
OTA
'Hoir'd lion like to be
a friend of ours?"
Twenty-one affirmative
replies.
Last, hut not least.
"After the ball is
over, after the break
of day . . ."
AlexiiiidiM-
Andrews
Armstriiinr
M.'ui
Hi.-in.T
Caipfiilcr
C'assmla
DniU-y
Dallas
UulaiK-y
Karnhai'<lt
Kajft:
(iillis
(ireeiu'
Ciriffiii
Hat;aM
Hall
Harper
Hull
.locques
Jones, P.
Jones, R.
Kennedy
Loftin
Long
Manning
May
Maynard
Miller
Nelson
Pate
Patterson
Poap
Ridenhour
Runiberger
Schaum
Seawell
Simpson
Sloan
Smith
Spanpler
Taylor
Thompson
Toumaras
Watwood
Wester
Wilkinson
Williford
Wilson, B. K.
Wilson, D. R.
Page One Hundred Sei^ntr-one
Beta Chapter of
Pi Kappa Alpha
Founded 1868 Established 1869
The far flung enterprises of the Pika clan were
evident in the variety of summer activities. Some
worked in hip boots for the Jolly Green Giant in
Washington State. Others enjoyed the natural
beauty, both feminine and neuter, of Yellowstone
National Park, while the Army gave a selected
few a relaxing vacation at scenic Fort Bragg. The
more astute Pikas were unable to tear themselves
away from their first love — their studies.
Scarcely had school begun when Rush Week
brought us Stone and his fabulous feed, the gar-
net and gold players, and unfortunately, not Dan-
ny. The results of our labors brought us twenty-
two pedges, led by Graham and his nine-man
squad.
Our social activities were cramped at first by
the flu bug, but some undaunted few managed
to have an informal and unofficial good time. The
Charlie Drummond, President
mmw
Pika shorties finally made their debut at our Fall
Social. Here Grantham became a Rock . . . Mor-
rison's red silk pajamas . . . Dickson finally lost
his pin . . . Rock fell too.
Santa Glaus, tinkertoys, dolls, and general con-
fusion brought us a smaller group of Barium
Springs children than usual. The pledge choir
joined the Salvation Army for its annual Christ-
mas concert. The brothers faced exams calmly ;
total fatalities — 35. Gladstone returned and el-
bows were raised. Mid-Winters hits . . . carica-
tures . . . snow and ice . . . Mackorell's car was
stuck . . . McCarty's pin gone . . . Smith celebrates
. . . Van Sant gets kissing disease.
Second semester rolls on . . . more count off's
... 2 AM . . . Thank you, sir, may I have another
. . . Beckman and Richards finally make it . . .
Good old Wooten becomes Hell Week master . . .
notches are counted and several reap the whirl-
wind . . . then Spring Frolics and the Dream Girl
Ball . . . beautiful Midway Lake . . . final exams
. . . Malinoski's big sweat.
The year was never dull . . . Tiger Morrison
and his pledge health program . . . Mullen, our
own Emily Post . . . Claude makes the wanted
list . . . Ace makes Phi Beta Kappa . . . Rocky
sets the mousetrap . . . Chaplain Paschall and
his assistant Tedford . . . Crittenden's military
dishonor . . . Spanky Mackorell . . . Dickson joins
the YMCA . . . Smith robs the cradle . . . Drum-
mond goes Harvard . . . Hayden wants a free
trip to France . . . Wool counting the days 'til
August . . . McVay and his dinnertime dialectics
. . . Hand's all night pledge party . . .
Vive la ll K A
Phi, Phi, and all that
OFF ITERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
("IIAKI.IK DRUMMOND
Bob VVooten
Walter Hefner
Dave McCarty
Miss Dotty Isley
Woman's Co!lej;c of the University of North Carolina
Diiiiiii dill uf I'i Kaitiiii Alpha
H(i)ii(ciinnii(i-(nirc rinuivcd.
Page One Hundred Sevent}-three
nKA
"Pledge banquet — a well-
earned celebration after
a successfid Rush Week.
A)i all out dnst-huut
before a dance week-
end— a la pledge power.
FT^cn
N
()i(f esteemed p)-esidenf,
and admirers.
Allen
Andt'ison
Atchison
Knllentiiic
Kt'ckniiiM
MriitoM
t'olsloii
Couch
Ciaiif
Crittenden
Dickens
Dickson
Drummonil
Freeman
Gladstone
(.Irunthani
Hand
Hefner
Henderson
Hendrv
Hodel
Hollintrsworth
Ivanoff
Johnson
Johnston
Lewis
Lehman
McCarty
McVay
Mackorell
Malinoski
Marston
Metts
Morrison
Mullen
Parks
Fasehall
Shippey
Smith
Stettler
Stone
Tavlor
Tedford
Thomas
Thrower
Triplette
Turner
Van Sant
Warr
Wells
Wool
Wooten
*. •^
LSi'
t l7ir mart mS£l BbiYiSiiT^
J'ligf One lliiiiJreJ Seieiilv/'iie
Epsilon Chapter of
^'^^...:- -..«,
Pi Kappa Phi
Founded 1904 Established 1912
A summer that was one long lost weekend for
many of the brethren ... A fanatic fall char-
acterized by firebugs and fire-water . . . Exams
and a chemical reaction: NaCL + H,,0 (sweat) ^
C.,H-,OH (guess) The usual damp spring . . . this
was Davidson, 1957-'58.
This year the Pi Kaps decided to liven up a
pretty dull fall and have a house-warming . . .
and at 5 AM December 17, Fraternity Court was
lit up by the blaze . . . We salvaged a TV set
with "snow" on the screen, three slightly bent
records, and Tripp ... It was a total loss.
But then there were little joys of monastery
life that seemed to make it all worthwhile . . .
so we sipped a foamy brew and remembered :
the best flickerball season in years, with a 8-4
record . . . fantastically large crowds at breakfast,
forcing Hunsucker to water the orange juice
(with white lightning) . . . Moose-calls at lunch
. . . and the founding of the Mickey Mouse Club
. . . Charlie Feezor's ulterior motive for taking
Music Appreciation : to learn the Wedding March
John Frye and Gil Grossman, Presidents
. . . The Comparative Anatomy boys decimating
the cat population of Mecklenburg County . . .
Rabbi X-'s High Pressure System nets 16 top
pledges . . . bigger goof-offs than the brothers
. . . Silas Keown making Ebenezer Scrooge look
like a spendthrift . . . Epsilonian coming through
again, despite Editor Dingier and "Sarcasm, Inc."
. . . Accounting 31, and six brothers meet their
Waterloo . . . Bishop and the Shrine of the Golden
Guernsey . . . Bill's Sunday ayem hangovers dis-
appearing under Johnsie's new sobering system
. . . hmmm . . .
Pi Kapps beat Russia to the punch with our
own Sputnik . . . Suffei'er from the "kissing dis-
ease" joins fat men Cook and Tripp at the no-
food-for-fats table . . . "Zap! You're sterile,"
and Chief the Bareman bites the dusty floor . . .
Abdul Nasser Fordham, the Roly-Poly Pharoah
from Cairo-Salem and his 24-girl harem spice up
function . . . And the reason Dianne's Joy-Boy
cackles like J. A. is that he's henpecked, maybe?
. . . "George" Tripp becomes local minister to the
coifee cup . . . And then this was the year the
back end as well as the front end of the Merritt
Escuemobile was hot . . . We asked : what was
Passionate Charlie Dickson's key to success?
the Continental Method, maybe? ... As Smooth
Harry Herlong frantically looked up Professor's
numbers in the hi'oivn pages of the telephone
book . . . And spend 45 minutes a day in Dr. Fred's
office being initiated into the R.O.N. . . . "Pos-
sum" joined the PKP menagerie, reluctantly . . .
And Tripp regretted his Nash wasn't the Am-
bassador model . . . The young noted Hebrew
physician and the Pharisee party sweep Winter
elections . . . And the word "gross" becomes
anathema . . . "Boll Weevil" and the Toast of
Queens slips out the back window with the girls
. . . R.F.D. fades into the moonset as Adminis-
tration cracks down on its last vocal critic . . .
"Aaawk ! Yes, m'dear . . .
The year-round season on foot-in-mouth dis-
ease.
"And we'll drink another gla.ss.
To the perfect . . ."
And the Pi Kaps ended another frantic year.
'Twas fun, though.
OKFICKRS
First Scniistrr
Pnsidi nt
John Kkvk
Sccrvtarji
Ckokck SUTCLIFKE
Trra.tiinr
Hon Kkown
Sec >H(I SciiHstcf
PiTsidrnt (Iii.HKRT Grossman
Sccrctanj Wai.tku Hisnoi*
Trmsintr IJoH (ioKDoN
Miss Cakolyn Uavis
Woman's College of the University of North Carolina
Roue of I'i Knp/xi Phi
Ouhi Tripp and the charter survived!
Page One Hundred Seventy-seven
HKO
/ give, sign me up!
The pledges came and
a good time iras hud by all.
, fti^- ^\mmS^
I ^bJ^^^^^m
f' ^^ 1j
^' A I kw 1
^■1*^^ **^' w^^f^^^ WM
Come on Charlie, life's
not tliat bad.
AdkiiiH
Allen
Kishop
IJoytl
Cuiinuii
ChiindliM-
Cook
Dickson
Diiitrlor
Dixon, R. B.
Dixon. K. I..
Dublin
Kmerson
Kscue
Feezor
Fliiitom
Foidhani
Frye
Gordon
Grant
Grossman
HanihriKht
Hedrick
HerlonK
Herring
Hunter
Huskins
Keller
Keown
Lide
Nash
Nickles
Powell
Rav
Riley
Rudisill
Stowell
Sutoliffe
Swaim
Tripp
Urwick
Van Ness
Wilson
Yarbrough
l%^AfJL
^£^h^
Page One Hundred Seventy nine
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Founded 1856 Established 1883
Leo's kith and kin swarmed and stumbled back
toward the cave of culture, eager over the fresh
blood of "some studying this year." The grip, a
slap on the back, and one more party before next
day's enrollment. "No Saturday classes !" . . . First
days of recitation, and Oh Hell, we're really back.
But we soon settled down, hit the books, and
prepared for Rush Week. Results : few A's, but
the best pledge class ever to grace our Minervan
Halls. The banquet was held and all blinked at
thirty-two full fledged balls of fire.
Thus the year '57-'58 began as a howling suc-
cess and for its duration, we realized that this
one was the best. We will always remember : Pren-
tice's shotgun experience . . . Roger, and the
threat of "Red Domination" . . . Welborn, answer
to a teenage prayer . . . Zimmerman's absence
from a birthday pai'ty . . .
"Sex'' becomes hexed at G.C. . . . Currie, Carl-
ton, and Chaotic betting . . . Isn't Lanny viva-
cious . . . While others bird-dog, Alexander bull-
dogs . . . Bobby Jones threatens us with dictator-
Roger Powell
AND
Ned Hedgpeth
. Presiden,
fs
£P"
iW
IM
31- -
'-^
Il._p
^
^W'
..-.11.^ , , ,, .^
- '
a
t*-f
ship . . . "Brassie" snaked on by baby sister
(Aw Hell!) . . . Joe Douglas exchanges Platoism
for Prodigality . . . Jones hits the pulpit . . .
"Fabulous" reads engagement notices and thus
is disclosed the secret of his mysterious, blue
countenance . . . "Mullet" is burned in effigy as
Skeeter checks fire safety features . . . Hedg-
peth (grrrr) . . . Fascinating Norvell becomes
officially henpecked . . . Terrible Bill Thomthon
. . . Ross WHO".' . . . Teen King Lesesne . . . "Fog"
Randolph . . . Future jocks: Messrs. Cannon,
Goodwin, Garrett, and Parker.
Isn't Webster bad'? . . . "Little Darling" . . .
Hudgins, our baby whale . . . Did LeGrand make
his grades'? . . . "Tinkerbell'' leads fairy con-
tingent . . . Follmer and Pharr, Pharr and Foll-
mer . . . There now, Craig, you can so sing . . .
Elvis Orr and Pete Pressley . . . Butler tears at
our emotions — and ear drums . . . Hattaway and
Aderhold replace "Buster and Beaky" . . . How
long was that shaft, Cory?
Tom Thompson tries to catch up with Harris,
but he's already made it . . . Just to remind you
of Hoffman . . . That Shan sure can wrestle
. . . Abie and Long continue as neat guys? . . .
Clay and Claude, emmisaries from J.T. . . . Grin-
ning Pete Powell . . . Covington sings right nice
. . . Fella irrationally rations dessert . . . What !
another Bivins . . . Lew Poo . . . Watch your
date, there's Coffey . . . Flash Gordon . . . When's
it due, Fritz? . . . Taylor, Big Hell-raiser from
Texas . . . Sam Smith bids Jamaica Farewell
. . . Chip shows us the ropes — shades of Birgel !
All of these and many more, are our remem-
brances of the year. The parties and the plans,
the happiness and the work — this was the year
'57-'58. For some it was the la.st . . . for all it
was one of the best. Time will widen our paths,
but will never dim our memories of S.A.E. I\Iem-
ories of work and sweat, parties and friendship,
plans and disappointments. We will always recall
the brotherhood we knew, a fellowship blended
and enriched by the lasting bonds of fraternity.
OKFUKRS
First Sciiiisltr
Pnsidtiit KccKi! I'dWKl.l.
Vivv-Pnaidf III I'liii. lloWKlMdN
Srcntdiii r.ii.i Wki.hokn
Tnasinrr Kai.imi llKicilT
S<C()ii(l Scincstrr
Pnsidiiit NkD HKKCI'KTII
Vin-Pnsidiut BUCKY Dknnis
ScciTtary HilJ, TllOMi'SON
Tnatiiirir Pkkntuk Ukown
Miss Barbara Corn well
Salem ColleRe
Sivcrthcait of Sigma Alpha Epsilon
"R(siilty: . . . tlic best plrdr/r class ever to <ir<u-( our Miixrraii Halls."
Page One HuiidreJ Eighty-one
ZAE
Lettuce salad, leg of
lamb, and liquid lunch.
Ho, Ho, Hell!
Gimme hack those
glasses!
Bradford and Smijtlt
retain their composure
ore)- the masses.
Adi-ihold
AU'Xttiider
A Urn
Balfntiiit'
Hoiini'tt
Biviiis
Hi ad ford
BiiK'ht
Brown
Brun.H
Can nun
Coffey
Cory
Covington
Craig
Dennis
Finney
Follmer
Frierson
Garrett
Goodwin
Hattaway
Hedppeth
Howerton
Hudsitis
Jones, J. A.
Jones, R. B.
LeGrand
Lesesne
Long
McAllister
Milstead
Nor veil
Orr
Parker
Pharr
Powell, P. J.
Powell, R. E.
Randol))h
Robertson
Rose
Rowe
Russell
Smith
Smyth
Spears
Taylor
Thompson, J. L.
Thompson, W. A.
Voipt
Webster
Wiley
Wilkinson
Wyrick
Zimmerman
Page One Hundred Eighty-three
Delta Lambda Chapter of
•"■^
Sigma Chi
Founded 1855 Established 1946
It was a gala and meaningful year for Delta
Lambda. We remember —
. . . the gathering of the clan for the Asheville
retreat . . . telling about summer tales — "I sure
did; how about you?" . . . Nick showed evidence
of his German life . . . "Little Murphy" Mc-
Cormick came to the boarding house . . . mass
psychology of Rush Week directed by Mickey
Mouse and "the Worthy Cancel' . . . "But fel-
lows, my grandmother likes this guy!" . . . the
elocutionary jaunts of McKinnon and Helms,
punctuated by a grandoise flourish of spectacles
. . . the long wet wait ... a Tadpole joined the
aquarium . . . the Pledge Party catered to claus-
trophobia . . . "Kubla Kwon" . . . personal gifts
for Jimmy Dan, and Daisy . . . Captain Cooley
and his crew . . . Clark fell victim to "the kissing
disease" . . . the Parkercrats vs. the Verrault-
publicans . . . "Brothers, we've got to stop giv-
TlM Teachey and Grier Davis, Presideyifs
ing Sam the grip!" . . . Mike and Koogie intro-
duced us to varsity soccer . . . Rieger and Thomp-
son, spastic cheerleaders . . . George and Westy
made Coach Dole look good . . . the quarterly
pitch for alumni money through the Wildcat Sig
. . . Wild Bill dictated programs of the TV Club
. . . Cole and Kirkpatrick were harriers — what-
ever that is . . . O.J. swept to an unprecedented
third term ... a King and a Prince gave a regal
air to the pledges . . . the Master rose to frequent
prominence in flickerball . . . the fall initiation
which should have been conducted in the infir-
mary . . . the big Toad finally hopped in . . .
"Yeah-h-h Pops !" . . . the dances came at last
. . . "Emily Post" Bell reminded us not to dip
our chins in the gravy while the dates were pres-
ent . . . "Don't tell me she's Charlie's sister !"
. . . the Sons of Ben conducted private tapping
rites into Bacchanalia . . . dates exchanged origi-
nal costumes for the fall function — one girl re-
ceived several band-aids . . . "Cop" Atkin.son and
his tiny, talented typewriter . . . our "sweet-
hearts"— Harold, Sweetheart of Kappa Delta,
and Marvin, Sweetheart of Bailey Dorm . . .
Peggy and Betty pawned their pins so Harding
and Bruce could afford the diamonds . . . "Jingle
Bells ! Amen" . . . the holidaze . . . Grier, Scripts
'n Pranks, and the apostolic succession . . . win-
ter sports — Woody, Sleepy, Joe, Harry played in
the w-ater ; Joe and Jim tossed for the hoops ;
Westy and George grunted on the mats . . . some
studied ; others studded . . . noted bootblacks
Johnson and McCorkle . . . Mid-Winters gave the
talented Frog another opportunity to exercise his
combo bargaining . . . Ruth, Rachel, Carol — our
happy wives and mothers . . . Weasel displayed
his magic touch in all intramurals . . . Initiation
came and the neophytes took up the cross . . .
seniors Moore and Patterson led a fraternity quo-
rum on the baseball squad . . . Spring Frolics
featured Derby Day . . . the beautiful Sweet-
heart Ball . . . "Shall we gather at the river?"
. . . exams, farewells, and — memories.
OI-'FICKKS
First S( mister
Prcsidftit Ckikk Davis
Vicr-Pri si(l( nt ROCKK HATES
Sicrrtarii TEX McKINNON
Tniisiinr I. asm Zkmi-
Srvonil S( nicstcr
Presidoit I'im Tkaciiey
Vice-President KocKK Hates
Secretary Tex McKlNNON
Treasurer Lash Zemi'
Miss Betty Henderson
Woman's ColIeKe of the University of North Carolina
Swpethrart of Sigma Chi
That Teaclieji sure is cosmopolitan.
-Jll^£.
Page One Hundred Eighlyfii'e
EX
Sack time
Clear the track
women drivers!
Hey! Let go of me!
AiuliTson
AtkinMiin
Hurrun
Hutos
Kfll
Bpiinett
liitti-r
Kolt
Hiiwtu's
Bridjrt'is
Hrooki'
lUirjrdorf
Burki-
CarriiUftKn
Cniiuth
Cline
Cole, C. K.
Cole. J. R.
Cooley
Dabbs
Davis
nillingham
Kifort
Farrar
Groonie
Hart
Helms
Hoagland
Holmes, F. C.
Holmes, J. E.
Huntlev, W. M.
Huntley, VV. T.
■Johnson
Kepler
Killian
Kilpatrick
Kinlaw
Kirkpatrick
Kottmeier
Lauphlin
McCorkle
McCormick
McDevitt
McKinnon
McRae
Macris
Milner
Moore
Morcock
Neubauer
Parker
Peters
Prince
Reapan
Reed
Rhyne
Rojrers
Scott
Shaw
Shiplev
Taylor
Teachey
Thompson
Verreault
Wesley
Westervelt
I'tiRC One lltindred Eighly-seven
Eta Alpha Chapter of
Sigma Nu
Founded 1869 Established 1957
Summer found the "nucleus group" in session
on the Union veranda, as Fletcher attempted
to give our anemic morale a transfusion. Fall
found a number of the "legion of the damned'
attached to our group, and sixteen strong, we
"rushed." When the smoke cleared (Thanks,
I.F.C.) we numbered thirty strong.
Aunt "B" snowed us with her meals even
though the waiters were a trifle on the insolent
side. Walt kept us in line with his Imperial de-
crees. With undying but slightly battered zeal,
we prepared for pledge training, still keeping in
mind such things as — the exhilarating aroma of
Dee's pipe . . . Bill and "good Lucy-Belle" . . .
desperate adventures of Pete and his cat . . .
Grana's lecture on Italian movie stars . . . C.J.'s
tales of jungle warfare . . . the amazing ability
of Adolph to mix nectar and nitro-glycerine . . .
Wertz, the weekend snow man . . . Dr. Labban's
lessons on the use of our cash, or how to cut off
your financial circulation . . . MacRae's cheery
comments . . . the way in which Davis tricked
me into writing the introduction to this article . . .
Shore continues to astound us with his va.st,
though somewhat non-academic knowledge of
bridge and chess and the fastly-disappearing fe-
male sex . . . Sayers continues his verbal attacks,
always ending, not with a bang, but a gu . . .
"Who won the basketball game? Crap!" Sigma
Nu continues to be atop the athletic world . . .
came pretty close to winning last night — only
twenty-five points . . . Studying, Reid? ... At
Greensboro? . . . Sigma Nu crowds at athletic
events continue to break all records . . . "Kernan,
you write this damn thing — I don't want to." . . .
"Write it vour own self — What do you think this
Walter O'Briaxt, President
The brothers continue to meet on two occasions
a week — at meals and on Monday nights to watch
Zorro . . . Duncan continues to amaze us with
his defensive tactics . . . Stick in there. Dune
. . . Did you hear the one about the old lady?
. . . "True wit is Nature to advantage dress'd."
Sigma Nu ends its first year on the Davidson
campus — a good year, one that will be remem-
bered for its personalities and fellowship, its
achievements and disappointments. This was the
beginning, from which will stem many years of
cherished brotherhood.
OFFICERS
President
Vic(-P)titi(li')it
Sicrttarii
Trrosiircr
Wai.TKK O'HRIANT
Tom Kern an
ScoTTY Wilson
Fkki) Lanois
Miss Nancy Taylok
(ii'eeiislioru College
White KoHv Queen
Cocktail hour.
Piige One HutidieJ Eighty-nine
EN
SIGMA NUdeus.
'You're sure you
leant to stay here?"
^ "But irhy sicecp the grass?"
liulilwin
Httliiu
Hlukc-
tluluiul
R ri>ss
Chit
Clark
I)i'Shaj;<>
Oiiiuaii
Kpos
(ittllt
(irana
Hujrjrins
Kfiiiaii
Kostlei
Landis
Lawrence
Lillv
MoCluie
McGehee
MacKinnon
MacRae
Moore, J. H.
Moore, L. E.
Morrisett
O'Briant
Reid
Robinson, B. S.
Robinson, R. D.
Roper
Sayers
Sell
Shore
Steele
Utsnian
Welsh
Werts
Wilson
Yarboro
Piiye Que Hundred Nhietyone
North Carolina Epsilon Chapter of
^:"' 'j^.i-JSKB^.^^savn-'HF* •■ •
'v^:t mm'4t>mtwmvi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Founded 1901 Established 1930
Summer breezes had spread local Sig Eps far
and wide — to Europe, the Far West, and even
Myrtle Beach. With the coming of September, the
wearers of the Golden Heart returned once more
to the campus and the bonds of brotherhood were
again renewed and strengthened.
Gone forever were the faces of those who had
led us in years before. Only the legends of Daniel,
McRee, Warlick and company remained.
New legends, however, were soon to arise in
the leadership of Jerry Eller, the intellectual in-
fallibility of Henderson Rourk, the campus wide
representation of George Kemmerer, and the
statesmanship of Alex Gardner.
New faces appeared in the form of a pledge
class with a quality not to be equaled — a tribute
to the hard work of Rush Chairman Jim Williams,
I. Thus, amid tales of summer school, Chicago,
Queen Elizabeth and the pea factory, the brothers
had launched what was to become a most success-
ful Rush Week.
Jerry Eller, President
The pledging ceremonies were climaxed by a
banquet and party held at Pecan Grove. Thus,
the final year down between the Pika's and the
Phi Delts took on emphasis as the end of a period
in Sig Ep history.
After weeks of rain and FLU came Homecom-
ing, and more rain, as the year took shape; a new
boarding house gave a hope for the future . . .
Boyce, Starling, Hill, and Moore as members of
the Male Chorus . . . Eller, Gaixlner, and Rourk
— members of AED and active in campus activi-
ties . . . "The Smoky Mountain Shuffle," one of
the best fall functions in memory, with hill-billies
Ferrell and Reuter leading the way to Kannapo-
lis . . . Rourk makes Phi Bete . . . The Barium
Springs Party resulted in the annual reflection
of who was entertaining whom . . . the social
calendar drew to a close for the semester with
the Sig Ep Holiday Ball in Winston-Salem . . .
Punch, Evelyn, Russ, Etch, Reuter, Roy, and
Jerry all working together to achieve success in
harmony . . . the new year brought exams and
then Mid-Winters — with the Churchhouse party
once again . . . However, another face was missing
from the brotherhood when senior Jim (Punch)
West graduated . . . the pledges were gradually
whipped into shape at the urging and supervision
of Pledge Trainer Sam Plyler . . . Hell Week came
and the neophytes were further prepared for the
mysteries of Sig Ep life ... In March they were
initiated (those whom the Dean would allow) . . .
With spring came Charlie's Day and another
victory for Epsilon Chapter (6 in a row) . . . and,
of course, the Red Fez Club was the scene of the
annual Queen of Hearts Ball over which Martha
Agnes Blackwood (Blackie) reigned in honor.
"Sad Sam, the Sig Ep Man" prides himself
on the fact that he is not a "type." Athlete, Phi
Bete, drunkard, and pre-min have all helped to
make this year a memorable one in the life of
the brotherhood.
Gone will be the Filers', Zehs', Kemmerers', and
Thomases'. New faces and new legends will take
their place, but the memories of this year shall
not be forgotten in the house of the Red Vests.
OFKICKKS
Prt'sidf'iit
Viv(-Picsidint
Sccntanj
Tnasiirer^
Jerry Ei.i.kk
Henderson Roi'kk
Alex Gardner
Jim Boyce
Miss .\1ai;tiia V.lm kwooij
University of South Carolina
Queen of Hearts
and it was a grand old daji far the rhapfrr
Page One Hundred yinetythree
l<i>E
I can't sing
too well either.
Hey! That Ixiii
has a camera!
Here, ijoii take over.
Alluii
Boyci*
RruokM
Cli'Minifi
Cooke
CraiK
Dewhiirst
Kller
Foirleman
(iurdiier
Cattis
Hall
Haniiier
Hartiuun
Hill
Keninieier
Lloyd
Love
Moore
Xash
Nye
Pease
Kuui'k
SaiKent
St. Clair
Thomas
Williams. .1. .1.
Williams, S. .1.
Wolfe
in^titi
Honorary Fraternity Council
I*rt'sittrnt
OKI
••ici
KKS
I'lll.l. I'dMKKOY
Vire-l'ri sid
, »t
Hroo Misi.K
Seeretarii
Treasurer
HKNKY (IRIKFIN
Rii.i. Pkick
AllKlNS, .1.
Bekmiakdt. .1.
bondikant. b.
BRL'BAKER. R.
Carmichael, D.
Drummond, C.
Gramley. D.
Griffin, H.
Hand, L.
KEM MERER. G.
Maynari). G.
MiSLE. H.
Paschall, H.
Payne, N.
pomeroy, b.
Price, B.
ROURK. H.
Thompson, W.
Thrailkill, T.
Wall, C.
Page One Hundred Sinelyscven
North Carolina Gamma of
Phi Beta Kappa
Founded December 5, 1776
OFFICERS
President George Labban
Vice-President Charles E. Ratliff
Secretary-Treasurer J. Wilson McCutchan
The national honorary fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa, represents the highest honor be-
stowed for excellence in scholastic achievement. Having been founded December 5,
1776, at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, the Society is
almost as old as our nation itself. It was originally a social organization, but in 1831
Harvard University removed the requirement of secrecy, and through the next half
century the nature of the society changed from social to honorary. Women were ad-
mitted to membership in the 1870's by the University of Vermont. The Davidson chap-
ter. North Carolina Gamma, was founded in 1923. Phi Beta Kappa has grown consid-
erably since its inception so that it now embraces more than one hundred and sixty
chapters in most of the higher ranking colleges and universities in the country.
At Davidson the members of Phi Beta Kappa are chosen twice each year from the
members of the senior class, and occasionally a few members of the junior class with ex-
ceptional records are eligible for election in the spring. Invitations are never issued to
more than twelve and one-half percent of the senior class, and to no more than eight per-
cent of the junior class, and only those students averaging 92 or above are elected.
The men chosen for this recognition are primarily required to have maintained a
high average, but they are also expected to possess character and integrity, in addi-
tion to a certain amount of leadership ability. This honor represents sheer ability, but
more significant, it embodies a job well done, for talent is of no value unless it is
applied.
Fratres in Facultate
J. C. Bailey
R. R. Bernard
J. M. Bevan
J. 0. Conarroe
W. P. Gumming
C. G. Davidson
F. W. Johnston
G. Labban
D. S. LaFar
H. T. Lilly
T. S. Logan
J. W. McCutchan
W. G. McGavock
J. A. McGeachy
S. D. Maloney
M. E. Polley
0. J. Thies
B. D. Thompson
P. N. Trakas
G. B. Watts
Page One Hundred Ninety-eight
p di !?^
B
.1..MN Hkkmiardt Dave Uraiipiikii Richard Bri baker Li-nvn Chapin Hill CoijiT"N>»,^ hAiRMAS n mmi
i;t:<iKr.E Cii.MK.R Mike Martin Cirtis Patterson Hii.i, Pumerov Henderson HV " "■■
Kn Stewart Wii.i.ie Thompson Tom Tmrah.kii.i. Lairens Walker \\"I
' ^ ■* ^»^^*^fi^m^f*^ m mm^mn^ M^^ ^>^»^^ ^^^^^w^"»^N^
Delta Circle of
Omicron Delta Kappa
Founded May 24, 1917
OFFICERS
President Bill Bondurant
Vice-President Dave Bradford
Secretary C. Shaw Smith
Treasurer John Bern h ardt
Omicron Delta Kappa is made up of men who are idealists in the highest sense of
the word. But they have made one further and quite necessary step : they have put their
ideals into practice. Or as a vespers orator might state it, they have in some way, great
or small, seen that the "word is made flesh."
ODK has a three-fold purpose : to recognize men who have attained a high standard
of efficiency in collegiate activities ; to bring together the most representative men in
all phases of college life, and thus to create an organization which will help mold the
sentiment of the institution on questions of local and intercollegiate life ; to bring to-
gether members of the faculty and students of the college on a basis of mutual interest
and understanding.
There are five prime prerequisites for membership in ODK : character, leadership
and service in campus life, scholarship, fellowship, and consecration to democratic
ideals.
Delta Circle has this year sought to discuss problems dealing with the very core and
essence of our college. Discussions were held on student-faculty relationships, a revision
of the student government make-up, and a high point was reached when the group
unanimously sent a recommendation to the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
College urging that tuition be increased in order that faculty salaries might be raised.
Perhaps a leader of another year best summed up the purpose of Omicron Delta
Kappa on the Davidson campus : "Through its voice as an independent body, the Circle
has a chance to assume the often neglected role of the leader as a prophet. This is the
ideal of the men who wear one of the most coveted emblems a Davidson man may ac-
quire— the circular key of Omicron Delta Kappa."
Fratres in Facultate
J. C. Bailey
E. A. Beaty
J. 0. CONARROE
W. E. Dole
H. E. Fulcher
A. V. GCLDIERE
A. G. Griffin
F. W. Hengeveld
F. W. Johnston
D. S. LaFar
H. T. Lilly
J. W. McCutchan
W. G. McGavock
M. W. McGill
D. G. Martin
J. L. Payne
C. J. Pietenpol
W. 0. Puckett
L. B. SCHENCK
C. S. Smith
A. H. Whittle
J. B. Woods
W. G. Workman
Page Tiro Hundred
'rm-
WHO'S WHO Among Students in
American Universities and Colleges
John Bernhardt
Grier Davis
Phil Lewis
Ross Smyth
Bill Bondurant
Dave Fago
Gary Maynaru
Charlie Stowe
Dave Bradford
Bill Fraley
Bill Pomeroy
John Trask
Lloyd Chapin
Bob Jones
Bill Price
Gerald Wilson
Page Two Hundred Two
p r^ o r> p .f"i r)
Q A ^ P P ^ ^.
('"I.KMAN. r.
KirYKKNDAI.I.. J.
lU'TIIKKPOKII, C.
CKK. M.
Ml'llKYIIK, A.
STI'ART. D.
Haut, <;. ii..i-.».. J
Ml'Cl'MXII'GH. I>. Mi'Nkiu.. I.,
TlirRMAM, R. Wai.i.. C.
The Beaver Club
OFFICERS
Picftidenf. f'RAic; Wall
Vice-President Charlks RlTHKRFORD
S((i(tftnj-Treasurei- Frkd Lane
The Beaver Club is an honorary society con-
sistinp of 11 juniors and 12 sophomores. The club
was founded in 19.S6 to honor sophomores for
their participation in school activities and gen-
eral leadership. This club has l)een active since
1936 except for the years 1943-1946 when it was
discontinued becau.se of the war.
Because of the nature of the club and its duties,
special emi)hasis in choosintr members is i)laced
on athletic participation during the freshman
year. A maximum of 12 members are cho.sen in
the sprinp of their freshman year, and these men
bejrin active participation in the club upon ije-
jrinninjr their sojihoniore year. Consequently, the
risinjr seniors of the club become inactive.
The purpose of the club is to foster pood rela-
tions between Davidson Collepe and other collepes
and universities by a.ssistinp and entertaininp
\isitinp athletic teams while they are on the
Davidson Collepe campus, and to sponsor worth-
while campus activities.
The club's duties are not confined to athletic
teams completely. This year, for example, the club
was resi)onsii)le for entei-taininp visitors durinp
the dedication of Little and Cannon dormitories.
Also the club a.ssists per.sons who come to the
collepe to officiate in the athletic events. The.se
services have been appreciated by visitors and
have helped to ujihold the tradition of friendli-
ne.ss on the David.son Collepe campus.
Page Two Hundred Three
The D Club
OFFICERS
President Bill Price
Vice-President Craig Wall
Secretary-Treasurer DAVE McLain
Davidson men of aRility and prowess find their reward
in the ranks of Davidson's varsity letter organization, the
D Club. The Club claims as its purpose the promotion of
all facets of athletic activity on the campus to include in-
terest, participation, and recognition for participants. Mem-
bership is composed of varsity lettermen who have volun-
tarily proven their right to belong in blind-folded, one-arm
boxing matches and olive-on-the-ice cake sessions.
Recognition has come through a diversity of projects,
most noteworthy of which is the D Club Foolies. Presenting
local talent (?) in a variety of forms, this mid-April ex-
travaganza contributes greatly to the carrousel of Spring
Frolics weekend. This high drama, interpenetrated with
vaudeville pratfalls and slightly besmirched dialogue, has
received acclaim from students and their dates for many
years.
At the All-Sports Banquet each spring the D Club selects
and presents a trophy to the outstanding freshman athlete.
Recognition is also accorded to "Doc" White for his im-
measurable sei-vice to all athletic teams. The D Club takes
its greatest pride in presenting a large chunk of the profits
from the Foolies to a project chosen by the Club from a
list of needs submitted by the coaches of each athletic team.
A widening of the Club's projects and .services is continued
from year to year.
Page Two Hnitclrcd Four
t'LAKK
ColJIMAN
liKNNlIf
Kki KMAS
CtCK
CHKY
HirriN
H«
Mi.U.INliH'
Holt
IKVIS. D.
IKVI.N. K.
JamKm
Kkitkh
KrVKKNItAlX
Kwos
I.AMPI.EV
MrCi LL/>fCll
SlIIVE
SUIAN
Smith
Smyth
Sheajw
Stancil
Stewart
ST.1WE
Thikman
Teipp
VOIUT
Wall
Walla. E
Wahlii'k
Watwo<ju
Westeevelt
WoOBMANSEE
Wynne
Piige Tiro Htindred Five
Company B E^th Regiment of
ScabbaMf]pt^ Blade
'■-Mm
OFFrCERS
Captain Ned Payne
1st Lieutenant Charlie Stowe
2nd Lieutenant Ken Forester
1st Sergeant , Roger Powell
Believing that military service is an obligation
of citizenship, and that the greater opportunities
afforded college men for the study of military
science place upon them certain responsibilities
as citizens, we, cadet officers in various colleges
and universities conferring baccalaureate degrees,
do form this society in order to unite in closer re-
lationship the military departments of American
universities and colleges ; to preserve and develop
the essential qualities of good and efficient officers ;
to prepare ourselves as educated men to take a
more active pai't and to have a greater influence
in the military affairs of the communities in which
we may reside ; and above all to spread intelligent
information concerning the military requirements
of our country.
Scal)l)ard and Blade sijonsored both the local
honor platoon and the highly successful turkey
shoot for members of the faculty and college com-
munity. The latter, an annual event, has become
a highlight of the informal social calendar. The
society also was co-sponsor of the two blood
drives.
Preparations were made for having a military
ball which should be realized for the first time
next year.
The local company was represented at the na-
tional convention in St. Louis by Captain Ned
Payne, and it was also represented in the so-
ciety's nation-wide rifle match.
Programs included lectures given by Col. Adams
and Dan LaFar plus movies of actual combat
action.
I!((cl: 1(111'. ■ Cul. Adams, Watts, Basselt, .Johii.suii, Turner, Powell, Teachey,
Front low: Hemingway, Wallace, Smyth, Stowe, Payne, Forester.
Maynard, f'apt. Tliomp
Bkic Pencil Chapter of
Sigma Upsilon
FoiNHKit i;)!')
OFFICKRS
PresUk'nt .hiiiN I'.kknuakdt
Vict-Prtsidi lit IdM Kkknan
Scc'ii-Tnas. Riciiakk ( imminc.
P C D
^ ©■ i ? 9
P O O-
O f^ Q
Ukiimi Mini
( UiMl. H VKC,
r II Alls
(1 UMISi.
Damki.
Davis. C.
Uams. «..
Kaki.k^
Kk>k
HLGtIN
Kkmmkkkk
Kkknan
Lost
MaiKay
MOOKK
SflVEV
Stuakt
Wam;
WULPK
When the li^ht burns late into the ni^ht ilown
on fraternity court on Thursday eveninRs, its a
rood indication that the literary elite of Davidson
are gathered together in one of the fortnightly
seances of Sifrma Upsilon — oldest and proudest
honorary on the campus. Local sanctuary of the
Muses and the home of fierce battles in literary
criticism. Sigma Upsilon seeks, above all, to .stim-
ulatL', to jjerpetuate, and otherwise to enhance
the art of creative writing at Davidson.
After Secretary ("umming's minutes, which
usually include a large editorial and feature .sec-
tion, and the invariable coffee and doughnuts —
the only approved ambrosia for the Davidson de-
votees of the Muses — the real business of the
evening begins. Following the reading of each
of the literary chef d'oeuvres, the brothers — stu-
dents and faculty on equal terms — begin the crit-
ical analysis and apprai.sal. Gradually the talk
drifts to art, religion, philosophy, and an inquiry
into the more significant phases of campus life.
As the wee hours approach, the brothers return
to their rooms full of wisdom and knowledge and
contentment.
This year has been full of changes and new
ideas in Big Up. From the very beginning, when
we encountered two unusual program.s — the folk-
.song and ballad singer and the meeting with
Queen.s — through the winter, when we were star-
tled by Carmichael's play, into the spring, when
competition for the coveted Willa Cather award
reached a high point and sleep reached a low,
this has been a profitable and exciting year.
The literary smorgasbord, following well-estab-
lished tradition, included poetry, sketches, short
.stories, plays, and one or two things which can't
easily be categorized. In the cour.se of the year,
everv .student brother has read at least one offer-
ing before the group. The most ambitious under-
taking is the annual bid for the great American
novel — a well-wrought narrative of David.son ex-
istence in installments by eight brothers.
This vear there became evident some devia-
tions from the traditional Sig Up style, which
has been called "expre.ssionali.stic. naturali.stic,
p.seudo-existential realism": more dialogue and
fewer descriptive verbal extravaganzas seemed
to be making a significant bid.
But one thing, it is hoped, will be forever the
same: the warm comradeship which radiates from
our famous circle of litterateurs.
Page Two Hundred Seven
Gamma Kappa Chapter of
Phi Mu Alpha
OFFICERS
President DON Carmichael
Vice-President Richard Gumming
Secretary John Adkins
Treasurer John Crawford
Phi Mil Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity of
America is a national professional and
honorary fraternity made up of mem-
bers of the music profession and quali-
fied undergraduates who display a sin-
cere interest in music. The national by-
laws state a four-fold purpose of the
organization : "to advance the cause of
music in America ; to foster the musical
welfare and brotherhood of students of
music; to develop the truest fraternal
spirit among its members; and to en-
courage loyalty to the Alma Mater."
At Davidson, Gamma Kappa chapter
annually brings to the campus several
recitalists, sponsors the Interfraternity
Sing, presents a program of American
Music, and occasionally opens regular
meetings of wider interest of the fra-
ternity to the public. The meetings of
a more esoteric nature, which are not
open, typically assume a riotous aspect
in which Robert's Rules of Order be-
come a masque for anarchy, and music
is resorted to as the expedient for tam-
ing the savage beasts.
Fratres in Facultate
Adkins, J.
Atchison, D.
Bridgnian, S.
Carmichael, D.
Clark, W.
Cook, C.
Craig, H.
Crawford, J.
Cuniming', F.
Cumming-, R.
Emerson, F.
Faggart, P.
Lawrence, A.
McVay, J.
F'atteison, C.
D. B. Plott
J. R. Satterfield
Rourk, H,
Wang, A.
H. A. Russell
J. F. West
Wells, H.
9 9 V.
n c^ p p C ft 6 ft
Damkl, K.
McVav. J.
Sparkman. C
Le Cercle Francais
OFFICERS
President Bob Sloan
Vice-President Richard Brubaker
Secretary Henry Brown
"Vive la France!" perhaps could be considered
the motto of Le Cercle Francais, which tried to
promote interest in the French culture, its lan-
guage, and its people. For most of the members
of Le Cercle, it was too difficult to go to France;
hence, France had to be brought to Le Cercle.
One such portion of France was fortunately
available in the person of Mademoiselle Christiane
Rimbault who from time to time presented cau-
series on various topics. Mademoiselle Rimbault
had the ditiicult task of filling the shoes of last
year's French delegation. Mireille Dardel, Alain
Boiton, and Jacques Delpech.
Programs showed as much variability as France
itself; there was everything from the usual farce
presented by the newly-elected membership to a
comparison and contrast between the French way
of celebrating Christmas and the American way.
A typical meeting was begun with various
greetings in the salon of Chez Watts or Goldiere,
which was followed by the sometimes slightly
Anglicized business session — roll call, reading of
minutes, and introduction of the program. French
.songs always were a delightful conclusion to the
program although .some found it difficult to keep
one eye on the music, to try to decipher French
sounds, and at the same time, to articulate both
music and words in a manner tolerable to their
neighbors. If "Vive la France' was the fir.st mot-
to, then following as a close second was "\'ive les
rafraichis.sements." Mesdames Goldiere and
Watts knew their French pastries and served
them to a group hungry for French culture.
The year was climaxed in the annual pilgrimage
to Chez Montet in Charlotte, where the atmos-
phere was most suitable for the conclusion of the
year's program. As most agreed, the year was a
success, full of stimulation and interest. For tho.se
who had wished to improve their conversation,
their comprehension, or their understanding of
France and Frenchmen, none spoke his last "au
revoir" without feeling closer to his transoceanic
neighbors.
North Carolina Alpha Chapter of
Alpha Epsilon Delta
OFFICERS
President Bill Pomeroy
Vice-President Charlie Dru m m ond
Secretary. Alex Gardner
Treasurer Henderson Rourk
Alpha Epsilon Delta is a national honor society
for premedical students. It is an affiliated society
of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, the American Council on Education,
and a member of the Association of Colleji:e Honor
Societies. The North Carolina Alpha Chapter was
established at Davidson on March 23, 1936.
The aims of the society are to encourage ex-
cellence in premedical scholarship, to stimulate
an appreciation of the importance of premedical
education in the study of medicine, to promote
cooperation and contacts between medical and
premedical students and educators in developing
an adequate program of premedical education, and
to bind together similarly interested students.
During the past year AED has presented a
series of programs designed to cover several areas
of human pathology and other topics of interest
to the pre-med student. The programs, composed
of speakers from the surrounding area, were sup-
plemented by film presentations. Among the pro-
grams presented were discussions on ophthalmol-
ogy, organic brain disease, pathology as a field of
medicine, and anesthetization.
The society feels that under the leadership of
its president. Bill Pomeroy, and the guidance of
its faculty advisor. Dr. W. 0. Puckett, it has com-
pleted a most successful year in accomplishing
the aims for which it was founded.
Bates Bernhardt Biggers Bishop Bradford Brubakei
Cook Drummond DuPuis Edwards, S. Edwards. W. Eller
Hand Herlong Hollingsworth Hull Keown Kimball
Lynn McBrvde McCutchen Maynard Morris Neale
Smith Stein Stewart Turner Westervelt
Burns
Caldwell
Chapman
Colston
Erckman
Feezor
Floyd
Gardner
Lathan
Loftin
Lucas
Overall
Pomeroy
Rourk
St. Clail
ft P ^ p. ^ P P f^. Q p.
p f^ f^ r^, p n o Q Q
I Q. ^ p C. r^ (^ C)
p p r. p a 9 P P- Q
^ki^^fM^^
p D p p P P -Ci
^kM^kJfk^kdfk^S
Alpha Alpha Chapici- ol
Gamma Sigma Epsiloii
I'll sidiiit
OKI
[■'\r:
KKS
John Adkins
\' id -I'll nidi
1 lit
Hknkv Ckikkin
Sic lit aril
I^II.I, ('(ll,ST(!N
TrcasKi-cr
KKNIK ("AKrKNTKR
The Alpha Alpha Chapter of ("lanima Sij^mia
Epsilon Chemical P^raternity wa.s founded at
David.soii in December of 1919. The Davidson
Chapter, heinjr the Mother Chapter, was the first
of 18 chapters in the ten states across the nation.
Camma Si^nia Kpsilon has the distinction of l)einK
the onl\' national coe(iiicati(nial cheniistr.v fratei'-
nity in the nation.
The .stated piirpo.se of the fraternity has been
to recognize outstanding achievement in the va-
rious chemistry courses and to promote interest
in the study of chemistry.
David.son's Alpha Aljiha Chai)ter is i)roud to
claim .several of its own faculty amonjr its mem-
bers. Dr. John B. Gallent, who has spent the lat-
ter part of this college year .studyinjr in England,
was Grand Alchemist of the David.son Chapter in
his student days, as well as a contributor to "The
Ray," the national fraternity majrazine.
Another worthy alumnus, Profe.s.sor O.scar J.
Thies, was one of the orijrinai sijrnatories of the
fraternity and held the national odice of Grand
Keeper of the Cult for many years.
Durinjr the pa.st year, under the leadership of
John Adkins and Henry Gridin. Gamma Sijrma
P^ljsiion has spon.sored several lectures by men
outstanding in their field of the hijfhly complex
and specialized chemical profession.
Intere.stiuK and educational field trips have been
made to nearby indu.strial and textile centers
which afforded insights into practical applied
chemistry in action.
Fratres in Facultate— J. B. Gallent, T. S. Lo-
yan, W. 0. Puckett, and O. J. Thies.
Not pictured : Antley.
Adkins
Batbs
Bernhardt
BlORERS
BiSHOI-
Bl'RNS
Caldwell
Carpentsii
Colston
DKI'MHOND
DuPuis
KnWARDS
Ellek
Ench
(Gardner
Cee
CRirpiN
Hand
HERLONO
HOLUNCSWORTH
Hull
Kimball
KnTTMEIER
I.ampley
Lathan
MCCl'TtHEN
Moore
MORHISKTT
Neai.e
Overall
Pearsall
Poindexter
Reid
ROL'RK
Smith. K.
Smith. S.
Stei n
Woods
a n o (^ P 9 Q
Q P C^ O Q O (^
J^ p ^ n ^ -0
Business-Economics Association
OFFICERS
President Gary Maynard
Vice-President.... Ken Forester
Secretary Shelbourne Wallace
Treasurer Dave Page
The Business-Economics Association, composed
of upperclassmen in the Departments of Business
Administration and Economics and of those men
who have expressed an interest in the activities
carried on by the organization, is the most re-
cently founded organization on the Davidson cam-
pus.
In only a brief period it has become one of the
school's "working" clubs. The potential of the
membership is very high as shown by the inter-
esting and informative programs which have been
presented to the student body and community by
the Association.
The Association is unique in that it is organized
in the form of a corporation, and it conducts its
activities in corporate fashion. The ten man Board
of Directors, assisted by Dr. Ratliif, faculty ad-
visor whose interest and guidance helped make
this a successful year, guides the policies and ac-
tions of the organization.
The purposes of the organization are to act as
an incentive for the student's higher scholastic
attainment, to supplement the student's knowl-
edge in varied fields, to provide qualified speakers
to present programs, to be a means of closer stu-
dent-faculty relationship, and to increase the stu-
dent's interest in his and other areas of work.
During the school year a series of interesting
programs which proved highly informative were
presented. A talk by Mr. John H. Noyes of E. I.
du Pont de Nemours and Company was the first
program of the year. This was followed by Mr.
Robert A. Kerr of Irving Trust Co., New York
City; Mr. E. E. Rousseau and Mr. 0. L. Allen of
Dun and Bradstreet gave an interesting lecture
on the History of Credit.
The Association co-sponsored with the YMCA
a debate by Mr. Thornton H. Brooks, a Greens-
boro attorney, and Mr. Carey E. Hargler, AFL-
CIO Regional Director, on the topic "Union Se-
curity— Right to Work Laws.' This debate was
moderated by Dr. Paul N. Guthrie of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina.
The Business-Economics As.sociation and the
International Relations Club co-sponsoi-ed a lec-
ture by Mr. Fayez Sayegh, Director of the Arab
States Delegation to the United Nations, on Mid-
dle Ea.st Affairs.
A banquet was the final meeting for the school
year.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
bondurant, b
Powell, R.
Piige Two Hundred Twelve
ll<)\VKIITO\. I'
KKMMKItKIt, (;
■^ -'N I'ANTICOSd. K
Ki ssKi.i., r.
WAI.I,. C.
Sinnia Delta Pi
OFFK-RRS
I'rcaidt )it
Vicv-Presidcut
Scrretarti
Hugo Misle
Fkitz RrssEi.i.
Ki) Panticoso
The Davidson chapter of SiKma Delta I'i was
founded in \'.)X',. Membership in Siirma Delta Pi
is considered as a reward to those whf) manifest
special interest and attainments in the study of
the Spanish lanRuajre. The fraternity attempts
to promote the study of the lanKuaKe, civilization,
and literature, and to further the understanding
of the Spanish culture in the hope that a hi^'her
relationship mijrht develop between the students
of our nation and those of the Hispanic world.
The ollicers of Si^ma Delta Pi al.so .serve as the
ofiicers of the Spanish Club, membership in which
is ijreliminary to membership in Si^-ma Delta Pi.
Fratres in Facultate: J. Y. Cau.sey, A. V. Gold-
iere, P. N. Trakas.
Sigma Pi Sigma
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretanj-TreasKrer
Henry Griffin
George Gilmer
John Johnson
Sipma Pi Sipma was founded at Davidson Collepe
in 1921 and in its thirty-six years of existence has be-
come a member of the As.-<ociation of ('ollejre Honor
Societies and an aUiliated society of the American As-
sociation for the Advancement of Science. It is the only
national physics honor society. The objectives of the
society are to award distinction to .students showing
hiph scholarshij) and promise in physics, to promote
student intere.-^t in re.search and advanced study, to
encourape a professional spirit and friendship, and
to popularize intere.st in physics amonp the members
of the general collejriate public.
Thi.s year's activities included programs from both
outside .sources and the members. Highlighting the
series was a detailed evaluation of our national missile
program by a member of the faculty, the philo.sophic
history of physics, tission and fusion, and laboratory
procedures were also studied. Activities were closed
with an informal meeting and fish fry.
GU,MER, G.
Griffin. H.
Johnson, J.
Sigma Delta Psi
OFFICERS
President Dale Gramley
Vice-President Bill Warlick
Secretary-Treasurer Dave Warden
^ ©
mhdfhd:^
Sigma Delta Psi is a national athletic fraternity
composed of those men who have performed the fifteen
physical feats necessary for membership as well as
maintaining a satisfactory scholastic standing. These
feats represent a diversified field of athletic skills.
Because of this, membership is limited to those men
who possess both mental and physical ability.
As the Greek letters signify — "The body is servant
of the mind." The key to membership is then a matter
of physical, mental, and moral development. The small
number of men who have been able to fulfill these quali-
fications is ample proof of their versatility.
Fratre in Facultate— A. H. Whittle.
BONDURANT. B. CHAPIN. L. CoLSTON. B.
Eller. J. (;iLMEK. G. Griffin, H.
Lewis. P. Pasi hai.i.. H. RnrRK. H. Thrailkill. T.
,itih^k
^ "^ r^
Delta Phi Alpha
OFFICERS
President HENDERSON RoURK
Vice-President Harry Paschall
Secretary-Treasurer Jerry Eller
Delta Phi Alpha is a national honorary scholastic
fraternity which seeks to honor excellence in German
language and literature. The Epsilon Chapter was or-
ganized at David.son in 1930 and since that time an-
nually receives into membership those members of the
student body who have completed two years of college
study in German with honor records and who have
shown a continued interest in the German language
and culture.
The fraternity aims to promote the study of the
German language, literature, and civilization, to fur-
ther an interest in and a better understanding of the
German speaking people, and to foster a sympathetic
appreciation of German culture. An annual prize is
given to that member of Delta Phi Alpha who best ex-
emplifies the ideals of the fraternity.
Fratres in Facultate — H. P. French, advisor, E. A.
Beaty, P. N. Trakas, and W. L. Robinson.
Page Two Ihindrcd Fourteen
Reel aiul Black
Masquers
Pnsidnit
OF
•MC
•;rs
(;k(!Kc;k Kkmmkkkk
Vicc-Prvsidtut
Mich Ckak;
Srcrttarii
Wakkkn Womhi-e
Trvasiin r
HAKKV I'ASCIIAIJ.
The Red and l^lack Masquers jji-ovido the artis-
tic outlet for dramatic endeavors of Davidson stu-
dents. All ])hases of theatre work are handled by
the students — backstage. I)usiness mana^rin^. act-
inp. and directing- Professor R. W. Tyson, fac-
ulty advisor, aids in the selection and direction
of plays.
This year the Masquers presented two plays.
The initial one, "The Mousetrap," an exciting
mystery penned by Agatha Christie, was staged
by student director Georjre Kemmerer.
The Fine Arts Fe.stival provided another op-
portunity for the Red and Black to perform, as
well as a tour. In this way colleges and the fren-
eral public throughout the area saw examples of
the dramatic activity at Davidson.
Through the tours and the publicity skits on
\VBT\' color television, the students have a chance
to jrain experience in theatre arts.
PAsniAl.L. H.
Kkmmkkkr, G.
Wl.MBI.E. W.
O n c> (h
]r. J ^,^. iZ^ tj^l
Alpha Psi Omega
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Harry Paschall
George Kemmerer
Warren Womble
HucH Craig
Alpha Psi Omejra, national dramatics fraternity, ex-
i.sts on the Davidson campus not only to cultivate in-
tere.st in the theatre, but al.so to recopnize achievement
in this tield. It does more than just promote dramatic
presentations ; it promotes truly worthwhile and sig-
nificant evidences of the drama. Its members pledpe
them.selves to this task.
Membership is ba.sed on talent exhibited in Red and
Black Masquers productions in back.stape work, act-
inp. and direction. Alpha Psi Omepa works closely with
the Mas(iuers. and as an honorary fraternity, serves to
reward those who have shown talent and effort in the
field of drama.
The Cast makes two annual awards in recopnition
of outstandinp actinp and outstandinp .service in the
general field of dramatics.
Page Two Hundred Fifteen
Eumanean Literary Society
OFFICERS
First Semester
President.... ToM Thrailkill
Vice-President Jim Overall
Secretary - Pete Kellogg
Treasurer JERE Starling
Typical of its heritage epitomized in the Wil-
sonian legend, Eumanean completed another suc-
cessful year dedicated to encouraging the writing,
speaking, and analytical abilities of its members.
Under two capable administrations, the society
again held its place as the dynamic cultural force
on campus. This was culminated in the publica-
tion of its liberal journal of opinion, Eiiphornj,
which appeared three times during the year ex-
pressing at a zenith Eumanean's purpose. It was
destined to be, appropriately, the "lyric cry in the
wilderness."
Second semester brought the outstanding fresh-
Secnnd Semester
President HENDERSON RoURK
Vice-President Ray Atkinson
Secretary Frank Nye
Treasurer Jere Starling
men into the oldest organization on the Davidson
campus. Their presence and interest added new
vigor to an already outstanding list of programs
which included literary gems from our own mem-
bers, debates, and imports of outstanding men
from the faculty and student body. One of the
most memorable was Professor Lloyd's scintillat-
ing presentation on Humour from around the
world.
Once again Eumaneans found Monday nights in
their recently renovated quarters to be richly re-
warding. Indicative of this is the high esteem
that the society gained for itself this year as one
of the more respected honoraries on the campus.
Bishop
Gumming
DuPuis Gardner
Kersey
Kim
Long
McCuTCHEN McNeill
MacKay
MISLE
Moore
MoRrocK
Morris
NicKLEs Nye
Overall
Pantigoso
Pease
PUCKETT
RouRK Samuels
Starlinc.
Th
OMAS Til
railkili
White
Womble
Wright
^ O (^
ilk
^ -^ cr ^
Philanthropic Literary Society
OFFK KKS
First Sciiirsttr
Presidcfit 1,kk Hanh
Vice-Pnsitli nl .liM Daubs
Srcntarii Hakkv I'asciiai.L
TrcnsKirr Moum MoKKisoN
Under the leadership of Presidents Hand and
Drummond. the Philanthropic Society this year
reached heights unparalleled in the memory of
this coUe^re K^'neration. I'luisiiallx' ^'ood pro^rrams
awaited us as we met twice a month under the
famous chandelier in beautiful Phi Hall.
These programs included discussions of such
a variety of subjects as the poetry of A. K. Hous-
Sfrmiil Siniislrr
Prcnidnit .., CHARI.IK Dri'MMOND
Vicc-Prrsident Caktkr Daniel
Scrnfnrii Pkkston F'A(;(;art
TicaKitrt r P>obhy Morrison
man. the New South, musical communication,
modern educational crises, linKuistics, and astron-
omy. Ksi)ecial hiRhlijrhts were Profes.sor Purcell's
presentation on Paul Hamilton Hayne and the
talk by Mr. Julian Scheer of the Charlnttr \rirs.
The appearance in February of an exceptionally
line jrroup of initiates pointed to continuing' bri^rht
(lavs in the futui-e.
Lawbeni'e. J.
HolXINCSWORTH
I.AWRESrR, A.
W^ (P ^. !^
Q p. ^ p. Q p
Q (^ ^ O P
r> o o rt
^
^^j^
CHARLOTTE ENGRAVING COMPAN
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
"THE SOUTHS FINEST ANNUAL ENGRAVERS SINCE 1915'
IM YEARBOOKS
KS W
,^^'
Observer Printing House
where you find discriminating buyers
of fine yearbooks you will find . . .
I^f. . creative designing . . .
2"d. . unparalleled craftsmanship . . .
3^^. . cooperative servicing ...
4*K . highest quality reproduction . . .
. . . the Observer Printing House
CHARLOHE, NORTH CAROLINA
*
and /"^ roceSMiici L^o.
I lorlli C (troliiiii
EXCLUSIVE SELLING AGENTS
D. R LoFar, Jr, '22
Dan S LoFar, 31
D R LaFar III, '51 _
Don S. LoFor, Jr, '57
W Marshall LoFor, '61
Spinners of
QUALITY YARNS
Cotton and Synthetic
o Orfon
° (^onihecl and i^arilecl
i^olton ijani6
i'uge I wo liiiiuliud Ixienlyune
THE GREATER
For Over 63 Years . . .
Your Home of Better Values
Compliments of
MORGAN-JONES, INC.
LAURINBURG, NORTH CAROLINA
BEDSPREADS — KITCHEN COTTONS
COLUMBIA THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
DECATUR, GA.
Strategic Location — Spacious Campus — Modern Buildings
Distinguished Faculty — Courses Leading to B.D., M.B.E. & Th.M.
Summer Language School — July 16-September 6, 1958
Fall Session begins September 18, 1958
For information address:
J. McDowell RICHARDS, President
Pnge Txvu Huinhed Twenty-two
Pipes to pool cues —
Pencils to paperbacks —
at your STUDENT STORE
— for you, by you
Pete Coleman, Mgr.
fage fuo Hundred rueiil) three
BhHCEH CoOSTRUCTIOn COIDPHOY.
, inc.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
p. 0. Box 30
Phone NOrth 3-3611
MOORESVILLE, N. C.
GOOD BUILDERS SINCE 1925
L. YOUNG WHITE, '22
President
Pflge Two Hundred rifeiily four
McCrary Hosiery Mills, Inc.
ASHEBORO, N. C.
Makers of Famous McCrary Seam Reminder Stockings
Sold by Better Stores Everywhere
C. W. McCrary, '24 J. F. McCrary, '28
We Appreciate Your Business
PIEDMONT BANK & TRUST COMPANY
MOORESVILLE
C A Potts. President. 10
F. L lackson, Vice-President, 06
L Young White. Vice-President. 73
Charles W Byrd. Assistant Cashier
DAVIDSON, N. C
OFFICERS
MT. PLEASANT
|. V. Lore, Executive Vice-President
W. H. letton, Cashier, '30
H. L. Fisher, Assistant Cashier
Mrs. Eugenia H. Deaton. Assistant Cashier
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
ATTENTION! PRE-MED. STUDENTS
FOR 39 YEARS WE HAVE SUPPLIED STUDENTS,
PHYSICIANS, HOSPITALS, INSTITUTIONS
AND HEALTH DEPARTMENTS WITH
Nationally KNOWN Medical and Surgical
Equipment and Supplies
WINCHESTER
Winchester Surgical Supply Co.
)19 East 7th St. Charlotte N C
irnlirio'^ HnuSP of S>~^V:ce"
Winchester-Ritch Surgical Co.
42\ West Smith St , Greensboro, N. C.
Page Tuo Hundred Twent) fiie
'f,*'
■:^;v-' .
THOMPSON & STREET CO.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
F. N, Thompson, '21
McDevitt & Street Co. F. N. Thompson, Inc.
CHARTER SERVICE A SPECIALTY
Enjoy the convenience of having your own
"private" coach — charter a big new Queen
City Troilwoys bus for that next trip planned
by your group. An inquiry will bring full infor-
mation.
RIDE NEW
TRAILWAYS THRU-LINERS
• AIR SUSPENSION
Ride on "springs" of air
• RECLINING SEATS
• AIR-CONDITIONED
• UNEXCELLED SAFETY
Inquire about our Express THRU-LINER
schedules from Charlotte to many North
American cities.
QUEEN CITY TRAILWAYS
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Page Two Hundred Twenty-six
Compliments of
BERNHARDT FURNITURE CO., INC.
Manufacturers
LENOIR, NORTH CAROLINA
N.
G. SPEIR,
Inc.
MORTGAGE
LOANS— REAL
ESTATE
SALES
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
130
Eost
Foi
rth Street
CHARLOTTE 2, N.
C.
Phone
ED 4-5386
'The best dressed men
on campus shop at . . .
Page Tiro Hundred Tifenty seven
"Borden s ICE CREAM
FOR YOUR OWN GOOD HEALTH'S SAKE
EAT BORDEN'S ICE CREAM
Lady Borden is America's Finest
Ice Cream
SERVED DAILY AT THE SNACK BAR
DAVIDSON ICE & FUEL COMPANY
Phone TW 2-4011
DAVIDSON, N. C.
We Are Ready To Serve You With
ICE— COAL— KEROSENE— FUEL OIL
A Quarter of a Century of Service
68 Service Installations
/^KurggN.,-^
Serving 11 Eastern Seaboard States
Page Two Hundred Tiveiity eight
BY A FRIEND OF DAVIDSON
BETTER
THAN
GOOD
ITS . . .
f
J^ifiQjnw/kL
We are proud to be chosen supplier of
dairy products for Davidson College.
FOREMOST DAIRIES, INC.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
There's a ''one and only"
in refreshment, too
Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Concord
COMMERCIAl AND PROMOTIONAL PRINTING OF DISTINCTION
.^1 «^v«0(L<£. ^^
. : .-. ' I A G r P « 0 D U C I S C 0 '.'f * IJ ' '. V
1930 CAMDEN ROAD • CHARLOTTE, N. C
/'nge Tuo Hundred Twenlynine
THE PORTRAITS APPEARING
IN THIS YEARBOOK WERE MADE BY
ITIHI STUD
Official Portrait Photographer
FOR THE 1958 QUIPS AND CRANKS
O^^o^
ADDITIONAL PICTURES MAY BE
ORDERED FROM OUR STUDIO AS
THESE NEGATIVES ARE KEPT
IN OUR FILES.
14 East Hargett Street
RALEIGH. N. C.
Page Two HiDidred Thirty
Graduate to Create
r Food Savings
At Your Fr
icndly
COLONIAL
STORES
Biggers Brothers, Inc.
Wholesale Fruits & Produce
Institutional Size Canned Goods
BIRDS-EYE and DELANY
FROZEN FOODS
Compliments of
lc«\.ream
MOORESVILLE
ICE CREAM COMPANY
From Edgar T.
To
All His
Friends
Bjrretr
flinrKotc
Bonded Built Up Roofs
Sheet Metal
Industrial &
Residenlul
Rc'Roohni;
insulation
Interstate Rooting & Asphalt Co, Inc.
520 West Palmer Street P. 0. Box 1086
CHARLOTTE 1, NORTH CAROLINA
Phone FR 5 8447
Subsidiary o( TUCKER KIRBY COMPANY
ARCHER'S GULF SERVICE
24 Hour Wrecking Service
Why Pay More?
Complete Lubrication $1.00
Brakes Adjusted $1.00
TW 2-9374
Furniture of all Periods • Silver • China
Objects d Art
Distinctive Gifts for all Occasions
1029 PROVIDENCE RD. • 120 W 5th ST
CHARLOTTE, N C.
Only Way To Protect Investment
Is Tested Modern Materials
Newest floors, walls and acoustical
sanitary ornamental ceilings.
New vinyl floors, easiest cleaning.
New vinyl wall coverings eliminate
painting and papering.
Folding Doors and Partitions.
Standard and Synthetic Carpets.
Come see 4 types of steel or wood
kitchens to make modern decisions
Bost Building Equipment Co.
FLOOR AND ACOUSTICAL CONTRACTORS
912 E 4th St , Charlotte. N. C Phone ED 3-0321
Prtge Tu-o Hundred Thirty-one
SMYRE
COMBED COTTON
SPUN RAYON
A. M. SMYRE
GASTONIA, N. C.
Page Two Hundred Thirty-two
HARRY &
BRYANT CO.
FUNERAL
DIRECTORS
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Bob Bryant, '42
Don Bryant, 'V
STERLING
DRUG STORES,
Free Delivery
INC.
401
N. Tryon Street
1501
Elizabeth Avenue
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
James J. Harris & Company
INSURANCE-BONDS
Johnston Building
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Telephone FR 5-7311
AIR-CONDITIONED TILE BATHS
DOGWOOD MOTEL
RT. 2, HUNTERSVILLE, N. C.
U. S. Highway 21 — Near Davidson
Phone^Dovidson
TW 2-8288
MOORESVILLE BAKERY
Monufocturers of
GOLDEN CRUST BREAD AND CAKES
Specialize in
BIRTHDAY AND PARTY CAKES
CHAS. MACK & SONS
WHOLESALE DEALER
Confectioneries, Tobaccos, Groceries
Paper, and School Supplies
Phone NO 3-3351 Mooresville, N. C.
T R Mack, 36
Thomas & Howard Co.
Wholesale Grocers
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
ROWAN
DAIRY
MILK-ICE
CREAM
Phone NO
3-6341
St(
jtesviiJe Highwoy, Mooresville
DAIRY
BAR
Page Tiro Hundred Thirty-three
(|arik((fi i f rum
104 SOUTH TRYON ST. CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Leading Jewelers Since 1896
DRESS IN THE LATEST COLLEGIATE STYLES
FROM
WILSON-WRIGHT'S, INC.
"COLLEGIATE FASHIONS"
DAVIDSON
LIGGETT REXALL DRUG
'You Can Depend on Any Drug Product
That Bears The Name Rexall."
Trade & Tryon
Phone FR 6-3526
CANDIES GIFTS
MID WAY SUNDRIES
"At The Shopping Center"
Complete Soda Fountain Service
At The Underpass Cornelius-Davidson
TASTE THE DIFFERENCE
and you'll agree
There's None Better Than 'S & P'
Always Ask for S & P' — Your Assurance of the Best.
LEARN YOUR WAY
TO
JACKSON CLEANERS
FOR DEPENDABLE
SERVICE
"Bring us your shirts too!"
MAIN STREET DAVIDSON
Page Tii'o Hundred Thirty-fmir
"£ VER Y THING MUSIC A L "
The finest BRAND NAMES IN MUSIC
STEINWAY
WM KNABE
EVERETT
CABLE NELSON
WINTER
PIANOS
MACNAVOX
The finest in HI Fl
RECORDS
SHEET MUSIC
HAMMOND
ORGANS
A Model for Every
Purse and Purpose
GIBSON GUITARS
ANDREWS MUSIC CO.
"Our 66th Yeor" EDison 3 8855 231 N. Tryon St.
Ernest Ellison, Inc.
"Just Insurance"
R, E. Ellison John C. Lydor
Phone ED 3-1146
Builders Building
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
SUPPORT
OUR
ADVERTISERS
MITCHELL & BECKER COMPANY
Manutocturers ot
ORNAMENTAL IRON & STEEL WORK
Phone ED 2-4473 1916 South Boulevord
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
VW^ITHERS ELECTRIC COMPANY
Appliances — Plumbing — Heating — TV Service
Davidson, N. C.
Phone: TW 2-2911
Page Two Hundred Tliirty-five
BARRIMGER HOTEL
]00°o Air Conditioned
HOTEL WM. R. BARRINCER, CHARLOTTE, N. C.
HOTEL COLUMBIA, COLUMBIA, S. C.
HOTEL RICHMOND, AUGUSTA, GA.
AMESTEAM
OIL FIRED BOILERS
10 to 500 H. P., 15 to 300 lbs. Pressure
Fully Automatic with
LIGHT OIL— HEAVY OIL— GAS
OIL-GAS COMBINATIONS
S.H.DUNCAN UO.,INI
Dial ED 3-8414
1001-A N. Church
itbrr'B
©IHIlpDuDCgJtEIgl^
eEivE Jin
MESTAURANT
Providence at Queens Rd.
FR 6-1224
Fine Training;
and
The Confidence It Gives You
provide a strong starting point for Davidson
seniors. You are the kind of citizens to whom
our economy and government may be en-
trusted, for you will help guard their free-
doms while you overcome their faults. Con-
gratulations and good wi.she.s.
DUKE^ POWER COMPANY
Page Tu'o WunAreA Thiriysix
Holt Hosiery Mills, Inc.
Manufacturers of
cJLailieS ^Tiiii ^7-asliioi\ccl CJ" S^eatnleAS ^>A/r
oSiet
Y
Box 616
BURLINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA
TH[ yilO^ iTIOiL BiK OF CHARLOTTE
Member of Federal Reserve System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
■t.^W.v
Compliments of
A FRIEND
Page Two Hundred Thirty-seven
Student Directory 1957-1958
Freshmen
Aderhold, R. M., 115 W. Avondale, Greensboro, N. C.
Agett, G. A., 1717 Longview, Kingsport, Tenn.
Alabran, D. M.. 303 Ann St., Kannapolis, N. C.
Alexander, C. D., Ill, 219 Kimball St., Kannapolis, N. C.
Allan, A. S., Ill, Box (564, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
Allen, J. L., 143 West End, Chester, S. C.
Allen, M. L., 139 Summit Ave., Mount Holly, N. C.
Allen, W. R., Ill, Box .568, Wilmington, N. C.
Anderson, J. T., 1628 Mt. Eagle PL, Alexandria, Va.
Armstrong, W. B., 908 Arbordale, High Point, N. C.
Auman, C. W., West End, N. C.
Barger, H. J., Jr., Rt. 1, Davidson, N. C.
Barnett, J. T., Jr., 3150 S.W. 6th St., Miami, Fla.
Barron, F. H., 223 N. Randolph St., Eufaula, Ala.
Beebe, R. O., 1007 Eulalia Rd., N.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Bennett, M. B., Jr., 813 Dover Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Bivins, B. L., 110 DeSoto PL, Macon, Ga.
Blake, H. A., 305 Calhoun St., Anderson, S. C.
Blake, R. A., 50 Chestnut St., Abbeville, S. C.
Blalock, G. R., Jr., 704 S. Broad St., Clinton, S. C.
Bolt, W. M., 1316 Parkway Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Bootle, J. C 365 Lamar Dr., Macon, Ga.
Boozer, F. B., Flemington, Ga.
Bowden, J. T., 417 Third St., Manchester, Ga.
Bownes, J. R., 227 Prospect Ave., Dumont, N. J.
Bovd, Q. P., 14 N. Broad, Porterdale, Ga. , . r<
Brenner W. A. 2623 E. Wesley Terr., Apt. 5, Atlanta 5, Ga.
Bruns, f . N. C, Jr., 526 St. Peters St., New Orleans, La.
Bruton, J. H., 411 Hamlet Ave., Hamlet, N. C.
Burke, J. 0., Jr., Rt. 6, Lexington, N. C.
Bynum, H. N., Rt., 1, Iron Station, N. C.
Cannon, W. H., Box 66. Guilford College, N. C.
Carroll, M. P., Box 707, Shelby, N. C.
Chase, H. H., Jr., 1305 Sierra, HuntsviUe, Ala
Clark, J. C, Jr., 2533 McClintock Rd., Apt. 3, Charlotte 5, N. C.
Clemmer, D. o'., Jr., Benton, Tenn.
Cole, J. L., Box 68, Yanceyville, N. C.
Collins, F. W., Jr.. 702 Norwood Ave., Shelby, N. C.
Colvin T B , 1733 Meadowbrook Dr., Wmston-Salem, N. C.
Cook, R. L., Jr., 509 Maupin Ave., Salisbury N. C.
Cooke, Q. E., Jr., 212 E. High St., Murfreesboro, N. C.
Cooley, J. H., Box 745, Black Mountam, N. C.
Cornwell, C. L., Box 157, Lattimore, N C.
Cory G. L., 3600 Madison Ave., Greensboro, N. C.
Cotton, S. R., Jr., 110 E. 2nd Ave., Red Springs, N. C.
Covington, T. L., Jr., Box 724, Rockingham, N. C.
Cox J. M., 125 Dogwood Dr., Mullins, S. C.
-'Craig, D. E., 1816 Madison, Greensboro, N. C.
Crawford, W. C, Jr., 16 Dogwood Rd., Salisbury, N. L.
Crouch W. M., Jr., Box 766, Hartsville, S. C.
Crute, J. M. W., Jr., 901 W. Hines St., Wilson, N. C.
Dailey, J. H., Acme, N. C. tt- ,. r, • ^ xi r-
Dallas, J. S., Jr., 1119 Rotary Dr., High Point, N. C
Dalton, R. L., 2204 Westfield Ave., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Davis, P. W., Ill, Piney Flats, Tenn.
Davis, R. D., Jr., 425 Hillcrest Dr., High Point, N. C.
Deane, W. F., Box 146, Safety Harbor, Fla.
Denham, R. D., 814 E. Sprague St., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Denton, J. P., 115 Sagasser St., Somerset, Ky.
DeShazo, C. V., Jr., 1415 Jefferson Ave., Oxford, Miss.
DeVries, J. O., IV, 118 S. Main St., Asheboro, N. C.
Dewhurst, R. E., 149 N. Royal Poinciana Blvd., Miami
Springs, Fla.
Dickens, A. J., Jr., Box 566, Morganton, N. C.
Dixon, R. L., 305 N. Falls St., Gastonia, N. C.
Driver, E. H., Jr., Box 44, Thomasville, Ga.
Duff, J. W., Jr., Box 512, Hendersonville, N. C.
Duggan, E. S., 3 Cedar St., Manning, S. C.
Edwards, D. N., Jr., 350 Arbor Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Eifort, J. D., West End, N. C.
Epes, H. M., Jr., 2701 Dulaney Ave., Lynchburg, Va.
Farrar, J. W., Box 263, Mt. Hollv, N. C.
Finch, W. T., Tavlor Rd., Georgetown, Texas.
Finnev, C. S., Jr., 169 Ivy Dr., Spartanburg, S. C.
Fleagie, J. K., 107 S. Franklin St., Reidsville, N. C.
Flintom, A. L., 229 E. Dovle St., Toccoa, Ga.
Follmer, Donald, Jr., 601 Hermitage Ct., Charlotte, N. C.
Gabel, G. D., Jr., 4617 Astral St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Gaines, S. F., Jr., Bovle, Miss.
Gant, R. M., Jr., 9249 Argyle, St. Louis, Mo.
Gan-ett, E. B., Jr., Box 48, Brevard, N. C.
Gayle, W. E., Jr., 1116 13th St., Huntington, W. Va.
Goodwin. H. P., Jr., 133 KnoUwood La., Greenville, S. C.
Gordon, J. R., Box 787, Hamlet, N. C.
Gould, F. A., Jr., 8512 Rivermont Dr., Richmond, Va.
Grant, R. P., Jr., 1328 Linville St., Kingsport, Tenn.
Grant, W. M., Box 852, Blacksburg, Va.
Grantham, V. G., Jr., Box 385, Fairmont, N. C.
Gravely, W. A., Jr., 2014 Hopedale Ave., Charlotte. N. C.
Green, R. S., 630 Palmer Ave., Winter Park, Fla.
Greene, J. W., Rt. 2, Huntersville, N. C.
Greene, W. A., 502 Pinknev St., Whiteville, N. C.
Guerrant, E. O., 218 Highland St., Winchester, Ky.
Hagan, W. C, Jr., Rt. 4 Ridgefields, Kingsport, Tenn.
Hall, E. P., 316 Mansion Dr., Alexandria, Va.
Hall, R. D., Jr., 114 W. Woodrow Ave., Belmont, N. C.
Hamner, C. D., Ill, 307 Rowland Dr., Lvnchburg, Va.
Hardman, J. D., 5101 Ortega Blvd., Jacksonville, Fla.
Hardy, C. L.. 1003 Harvey Cir., Kinston, N. C.
Harper, D. W., 360 Chestnut St., Rock Hill, S. C.
Harrill, C. H., Box 566, Lincolnton, N. C.
Hartman, E. F., Jr., 3004 Peebles Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Harvin, L. H., Ill, 935 Hargrove St., Henderson, N. C.
Hattaway, A. C, III. 3509 Dogwood Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Hedrick, W. K., 500 N. Myrtle, Warren, Ark.
Henderson, R. M., Maxton, N. C.
Hendrv, J. A., Box 454, Perry, Fla.
Hill, J. G., 2704 N.W. 44, Oklahoma City 12, Okla.
Holmes, F. C, 3854 Central, Memphis, tenn.
Hopkins, L. C, Jr., 81 Peachtree Battle Ave., N.W., Atlanta 5,
Ga.
House, D. C, Box 9, Epson Rd., Henderson, N. C.
Houser, E. E., 121 Hillside Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Hudgins, T. M., 3602 Kirbv Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Huling, J. M., 2820 Reynolds Dr., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Hunter, C. R., Jr., Box 7, Blenheim, S. C.
Hunter, W. F., 366 N. Greece Rd., Hilton, N. Y.
Irvin, D. A., 831 Arbor Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Ivanoff, N. A., 132 N. Wakefield St., Arlington, Va.
Jackson, E. L., 530 Glynlea Rd., Jacksonville, Fla.
Jacques, E. J., Rt. 2, Mooresville, N. C.
James, R. E., Jr., Rt. 4, Darlington, S. C.
Johnson, G. W., Ill, 505 Peachtree Rd., Orlando, Fla.
Johnston, H. C, Jr., Rt. 3, Statesville, N. C.
Johnston, E. F., Jr., 308 Graham, Wallace, N. C.
Jones, R. L., Jr., 506 S. Park St., Asheboro, N. C.
Joyner, W. L., 109 N. McKay Ave., Dunn, N. C.
Keiter, J. E., 1507 Perry Park Dr.. Kinston, N. C.
Keller, A. H., Jr., 3250 Overbrook Rd., Birmingham, Ala.
Kirkpatrick, G. G., Box 55, Gainesville. Fla.
Kizer, R. E., Jr., Edgewood Rd., Asheboro, N. C.
Lacy, G. G., Jr.. 3045 15th St., N.W., Washington, D. C.
LaF'ar, W. M., 611 Lee St., Gastonia, N. C.
Laughlin, K. M., 1719 Queens Rd. West, Charlotte, N. C.
LeGrand, G. B., Box 428, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Lesesne, A. E., 34 Pinckney St., Greenville, S. C.
Lilly, R. M., Jr., 425 Charlotte Rd., Fayetteville, N. C.
Long, W. M., Jr., 440 Salisbury St., Mocksville, N. C.
McAllister, H. A., Jr., 1013 Riverside Blvd., Lumberton, N. C.
McClure, A. B., Jr., Barium Springs, N. C.
Page Two Hundred Thirty-eight
Fresh
men
MiCorklf, J. T., ll,t« K..x<iaft Kd., Hiistol, Va.
Mc-Kailyt-n. H. ( '., Jr.. -Kil Olivr St.. l.cnoii. .\. C.
Mclntyie. B. \V.. 1J4 Wliilr Oak IM.. Sr>aitanbiii({, S. ('.
McKt'ithfii, K. M,. i\H Wt-st Kn.l Hlvil., Winston-Salfm, N. C
Mc-I.emlon. .M. .M., Jr.. IJJ.t \V. .Main St.. I.akf City. S. C.
MtNi'ill. I). I).. Jr.. ll.t'.l (antfrliury IM.. ('liarli)tti'. N. C.
MncKiiiinm. I). N.. Hux li.lC), (irccnvilli-. Ala.
Mai-ri.s. S. J.. l.'Ui'.i Chfstnut St., Wilinintfton, N. ('.
Mnini.r. T. V.. Kt. L'. Hox r>{)\, Miami. Kla.
Markff. J. K.. Jr.. lOI.'^i Di-iiifrius St.. Durham. N. C.
Martin. W. ('.. Ill, l-J'.i Mclti.n St., I.onjfviow. Texa.H.
Marstc.n. K. U., III. •JOd Wilson .Ave. Kin.ston, N. ('.
Maxwell. J. S.. ^ruW l.iu-iil,. Dr.. Kort l.aii.lordale. Fin.
May. Ilarrisiin. City Hall. Staunton. Va.
Maynar.l. D. K.. .-il 1 lU-lloyuc ("t.. I.os Altos. Calif.
.Mi'tts. I,. H.. Jr.. It; Hroa.l St.. York. S. ('.
Miller. K. A., ("restyiow Dr.. AI>inK'<lon. Va.
Millnor. \V. H.. III. 172 .\. fnion St.. Concord. N. C.
Moore. K. 1... II. 2l!l (.rattan. Ilarrisonhiirir. Va.
Murc-hison. J. M.. Jr.. IIM S. I'nion St.. Coneord, N. C.
Murray. H. G., Jr.. 22r. Tranquil .\yc.. Charlotte, N. C.
Nash, R. E., 513 Westover Ave., Winston-Salem. N. 0.
Neale. H. W.. 12-1 Baltic Cir.. Tampa. Fla.
Nelms. C. R., Jr.. i;!:?7 Catawba. Kintrsport. Tenn.
Nelson. B. J.. Rt. 4. Box 14, Chester, S. C.
Niven, E. C, lf.24 Garden Terr., Charlotte. X. C.
Nix. G. N., Jr., 21(!7 Lake Shore Blvd., Jacksonyille. Fla.
Nuckolls, J. C, 502 W. Stuart Dr.. C.alax. Va.
Orr, D. M., Jr., 20r> Sunset Dr., (Jreenslmro, N. C.
Pancoast, H. R., Jr., 802 Rotary, Hiph Point, N. C.
Parker, Thomas, Jr., 24 Highland Dr., Greenville, S. C.
Patterson, C. W., III. 712 Westwood. High Point. N. C.
Paul. M. A.. III. Aurora, N. C.
Pharr, H. N., 10:?1 Queens Road W., Charlotte, N. C.
Pharr. W. P.. Box 157. Bramwell. W. Va.
Pharr. W. T.. 20(5 South Mountain. Chenwille, N. C.
Pope, S. H.. III. !t72 Cumberland Rd.. X.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Powell, J. H., Jr., 2402 Benrus. San Antonio, Texas.
Powell, P. J., (;323 Cantrell, Little Rock. Ark.
Prince. J. F.. 3117 Westminster. Dallas. Texas.
Purington, P. D., 105 Monument Ave., Greeneville, Tenn.
Quantz, A. T., Jr., 208 N. Kershaw, Timmonsville. S. C.
Radford, R. R., 27 Desoto PL, St. Augustine, Fla.
Randolph, J. D., Jr., Ill E. Lanneau Dr., Greenville, S. C.
Ratchford, J. E., Jr., 201 Irwin Ave.. Charlotte, N. C.
Rav, T. B., 1.369 Springdale Rd., N.E., Atlanta 6, Ga.
Redding, T. S., Jr.. 372 Hill St.. Asheboro, N. C.
Redmond. H. S.. 105'- Evans St.. Morganton, N. C.
Reeves. G. F.. Jr.. 2378 St. Charles .Ave.. Jackson, Miss.
Richardson, J. T., ()19 Park St., Gainesville, Ga.
Ricks, J. A., III. r,52 Murray .■\ve., S.E., Roanoke. Va.
Rilev. S. G., Ill, 2409 Lake Dr.. Raleigh, N. C.
Ringe, C. L., Ill, Blair Place, Blairstown, N. J.
Robertson, H. C. 5 Ladson St., Charleston, S. C.
Robinson, R. D.. 103 Montgomery St.. Raleigh. N. C.
Rogers, L. A., ir.45 Sterling Rd.. Charlotte, N. C.
Rose. C. G., Box 12r.O. Fayetteville, N. C.
Rose, J. I., II, 15 Mt. Vista Ave., Greenville, S. C.
Rowe, C. E., Jr.. 442 Hawthoine. Danville, Va.
Rucker, J. L. Jr., 112 W. Fihhcr Ave, Greensboro, N. C.
Rustin, W. ('., Jr., Box 74C, Ga»tnniu. N. C.
Sargent, R. M., 2414 Selwyn Ln., Charlotte '.). N. C.
Schacter. K. IL. 47 E. 52 St., Indianapoli.s, Ind.
Shinn, W. K.. Jr.. 270H He.lford Ave.. Raleigh. N. C.
Shippey. K. F.. Jr.. 4721 Kilbourne Rrl.. ((dumhia. S. C.
Shue. II. G.. Rt. <;, Staunton. Va.
Simpson. T. E.. Jr.. Kt. 1. Richl.urg. S. <'.
Smith. H. F.. 1519 Wendover Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Smith, J. C, Jr., 1105 Sam Lion's Trail, .Martinsville, Va.
Smith. L. IL. 1519 Wendover Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Smith, R. K., Reform, Ala.
Snider. C. J., 33.5K Nottingham lid., Winston-Salem, N. C.
.Sowers, S. R., 244 Oakhurst Rd., Statesville. N. C.
Sparks, (). B., Ill, 34KK Koxboro Rd., N.E.. Atlanta 5. Ga.
Stanley. R. L.. 20H Royal Oaks. Thomasville. N. C.
Stanley, V. E., Jr., 1993 Maryland Ave.. Charlotte. N. C.
Steele." L. M., Jr.. 5Hm Franklin Rd., Nashville, Tenn.
Stettler, K. ()., Jr., 102 Fairfax Dr., Huntington, W. Va.
Stowell, D. C, Jr., 483(5 Headley Terr., Jacksonville, Fla.
Talbert, J. W., Jr., 1005 Law St., Hartsville, S. C.
Tavlor, H. B., Jr., 1204 N. Madison, Albany, Ga.
Tavlor. J. B., (•>24 Hancock St., Smithfield, N. C.
Taylor, W. F., Jr., 824 Albion Rd., Columbia, S. C.
Thomas, R. D., W.N.C. Sanatorium, Black Mountain, N. C.
Thomason, G. ('., Rt. 8. Salisburv, N. C.
Thompson. C. M.. 20<; Williams .St.. Lake City, S. C.
Thompson, J. L.. 1275 Monterey St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Thompson, R. L., Rt. 11, Box 98, Charlotte, N. C.
Turnage, M. E., 124 Ridgewav St., Little Rock, Ark.
Turner, D. W., 205 W. Calhoun, Plant City, Fla.
Utsman, O. E., Barium Springs, N. C.
Van Ness, T. M.. Star Route No. 2, Dunellon, Fla.
Vaughan, J. E., 1405 Cortland Rd., E., Charlotte, N. C.
Wade, W. F., W.N.C. Sanatorium, Black .Mountain. N. C.
W^ard, W^ J., 785 C St.. Harrisonburg, Va.
Watts, T. S., Box 366. Tavlorsville, N. C.
Webber, C. G., Jr., 1902 Fendall Ave., Charlottesville, Va.
Webster, D. H., 801 Crescent Ave., Greenville, S. C.
W^eeks, J. W^. 3 Savle Rd.. Charleston, S. C.
Wells, F. A., Jr., 1816 Winston Rd., Charlottesville, Va.
W'erts, A. P., Ill, 2327 Briarwood Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Wesley, R. N.. Jr.. 1414 Lilac Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Whitaker. F. H.. Jr., Rt. 1, Box 323. Kannapolis. N. C.
White, A. J., Jr., 35 E. Airy St., Norristown, Pa.
Whitten, (;. E., Jr., 401 Spring St., Thomasville, N. C.
Wiley, S. S., Jr., 200 Morrison St., Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
Wilkinson, F. S.. Jr., 408 Wildwood Ave.. Rocky Mount. N. C.
Wilson. D. R., 203 W. James St.. Mt. Olive. N. C.
Wilson, M. M.. 702 Glenwood Ave.. .Anderson. S. C.
W'insor. R. L., 60 Weston .Ave., Chatham. N. J.
W^omeldorf, J. H.. 1900 Mt. Vernon St., Waynesboro. Va.
Wvche, F. L., Jr., Oak Hill Rd., Petersburg, Va.
Wylie, M. H., Jr., 3037 Park Ave., Augusta, Ga.
Wyrick, C. L., Jr., 2015 St. Andrews Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Young, R. C. 236 E. Lake Dr., Atlanta. Ga.
Zimmerman. H. W.. Jr., 139 VV^ First Ave., Lexington, N. C.
Sopho
mores
Alexander, Chester, Jr., 504 Fountain I'l.. Burlington. N. C.
Alexander. J. F., 255 Colville Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Alexander. W. S.. Jr., 2039 Hastings Dr.. Charlotte. N. C.
Allen. A. G., Jr., 730 Pine Valley Rd.. Winston-Salem, N. C.
Ander.son, H. F., 113 11th St., Waynesboro, Ga.
Armfield, E. M.. 2930 Club Park R"d.. Winston-Salem, N. C.
Asburv, R. L., Jr., 1888 Meadowbrook Dr.. Winston-Salem,
N. C.
Atchison, J. W. D., 477 Ridge Rd., Birmingham, Ala.
Avinger, R. L., Jr., 1215 Westminster, Columbia, S. C.
Babcock, W. W., 703 E. Valencia St., Lakeland. Fla.
Baggett, L. W.. 2712 Nela Ave., Orlando. Fla.
Baldwin. R. Y.. 318 I'almola. Lakeland, Fla.
Bear, J. E., III. 1102 Westwood Ave.. Richmond, Va.
Beckman, W. P.. Hemingway. S. C.
Bell, J. N.. 228 Talbot Hall Rd., Norfolk, Va.
Ben.son, C. D., Box 1.33. Maitland. Fla.
Bentley, J. M., Jr., 2517 Rockbridge Rd., Macon, Ga.
Bethea, T. W., Jr., 418 E. Arch St., Lancaster, S. C.
Black. J. R., 106 N. Herman St., Goldsboro, N. C.
Page Txro liuDdrcd Thirty-nine
Sophomores
Bloomfield, J. G., Box 492 North Wilkeshoro, N. C.
Bracey, A. H., Ill, 120 Buena Vista Cir., South Hill, Va.
Braswell, J. H., 2270-B Lindmont Cir. N.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Bremer, C. C, 1605 Tryon Rd., New Bern, N. C.
Bridgers, J. C, Rowland, N. C.
Brooke, J. W., Jr., College Hill, Montrose, N. Y.
Broome, H. L., 1223 N. Main St., South Boston. Va.
Brown, P. L., Jr.. Ivanhoe. N. C.
Bryson, J. A., 232 Country Club Rd., AsheviUe, N. C.
Burgdorf, Augustus, Box 27, Springfield, S. C.
Cannon, O. D., Ill, Lavonia, Ga.
Carr, W. H., Indian Trail, Durham, N. C.
Carrington, L. H., 7800 Lindsey Dr., Richmond, Va.
Carruth, J. W., Jr., Box 711, Red Springs, N. C.
Carter, F. C, 709 Roslyn Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Carter, J. C, 58 Peachtree Way N.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Cassada, J. D. W., Jr., 107 81st St., Virginia Beach, Va.
Cater, C. D., Jr., 200 Sunset Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Chapman, L. B., 1021 E. 3-Notch Court, Andalusia, Ala.
Clark, W. D., 505 Townes St., Greenville, S. C.
Cobb, W. H., 2201 N. Arthur, Little Rock, Ark.
Coffey, R. D., Jr., Box 270, Morganton. N. C.
Cole, 'C. K., 5201 Randolph Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Croom, R. D., Ill, McCaskill Ave., Maxton, N. C.
Daniel, J. A., Box 56, Shelbyville, Ky.
Dargan, P. Q., Jr., 530 Connecticut Ave., Spartanburg, b. L.
Davis, L. H., Rt. 7, Charlotte, N. C.
Davis, W. K., 2050 Elizabeth Ave., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Dixon, R. B., Jr., 1331 Latham Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Dublin, D. H., 607 Grant St., Decatur, Ala.
Dulanev J. D., 1200 W. Franklin St., Monroe, N. t .
Dunaway, M. C, 400 Peachtree Battle Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Dusenberry, J. F., Jr., 423 Farley Ave., Laurens, S. C.
Earnhardt, J. F., 10 Park Ave., Thomasville, N. C.
Eckbert, W. F., Jr., Box 317, Cramerton N. C. .
Edmunds, L. N., Jr., 570 N.E. 135 St., North Miami Fla.
Engh C A., 3214 Old Dominion Blvd., Alexandria, Va.
Escue, H. M., Jr., 1051 Montrose Dr., South Charleston, W. \a.
Falls, R. E., 312 Tyne Rd., Louisville, Ky.
Farabow, W. S., 1417 Biltmore Dr., Charlotte N . C.
Fogleman, L. H., Jr., 202 E. Morgan St Wadesboro, N. C.
Fordham, J. E., Jr., 2225 Westfield Ave., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Freeman, T. A., Jr., 101 East "G" St., Ehzabethton, Tenn.
Funderburk, E. W., 506 Kershaw St., Cheraw, b. C.
Gattis, J. G., 8 Linestowe Dr., Belmont. N. C.
Gee M C, Jr., 807 Woodland Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Georse, G. W., Jr., 154 Vidal Blvd., Decatur. Ga.
Gillis, b. B., Jr., 107 E. College St., Mt. Olive, N. C.
Glenn J. T., 1915 Freeman Ave., Owensboro, Ky.
Grana, G. M., 485 Mt. View Dr., Valdese, N. C.
Green D. A., Jr., 6,30 Palmer Ave., Winter Park, I- la.
Grice,'j. D., Rt. 1, Stanley, N. C.
Grier J. B., 604 Charlotte Ave., Rock Hill, S. ( .
Gwathmey, E. M., Jr., 24G Connecticut Ave., Spartanburg,
S. C.
Hamilton, James, 132 West End, Chester, S. C.
Harris, J. J., Jr., Morrocroft, Charlotte, N. C.
Hart, G. W., Rt. 11, Box 171, Charlotte, N. C.
Hatcher, J. C, 600 Hempstead PI., Charlotte, N. C.
Heeseman, Garv, Jr., 2518 Forest Dr., Charlotte, N. C.
Hefner, W. L., Jr., 503 Davie Ave., Statesville, N. C.
Hellier, William, Jr., 257 Alberta Dr., Atlanta, Ga.
Henderson, C. H., Box 499, Norton, Va.
Henry, T. M., 31 Edgewood, Selma, Ala.
Herring, J. C, Box 126, Snow Hill. N. C.
Hill, V. G., 1404 Camden Way, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Hodges, J. A., Jr., 906 Rountree, Kinston, N. C.
Hoffner, R. C, Boxwood Farm, Rt. 4, Mocksville, N. C.
Holman, J. B., Jr., Batesburg, S. C.
Huie, J. C, Jr., 1303 N. Davis, Albany, Ga.
Hunnicutt, H. R., Jr., 510 N. Piedmont, Kings Mountain, N. C.
Hunt, E. W., Jr., 4201 S. Atlantic Ave., Daytona Reach, Fla.
Hunter, T. D., Ill, Haywood Forest, Hendersonville, N. C.
Jarrett, C. H., Jr., Box 69, Newton, N. C.
Jernigan, M. E., 77 Highland Dr., Atlanta, Ga.
Jones, R. B., 3503 Seminary Ave., Richmond, Va.
Kellogg, P. J., 761 Westover Ave., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Kennedv, D. C, Box 4, Hinton, W. Va.
Kepler, J. E., Rt. 1, Staunton, Va.
Kersev, O. T., Jr., 420 College Ave., LaGrange, Ga.
Killian, D. R., Rt. 1, Mt. Holly, N. C.
Kilpatrick, W. K., Jr., Pembroke, N. C.
Kim, S. K., Box 67, Ridgewav, S. C.
Kinlaw, W. K., Jr., Box 1018, Lumberton, N. C.
Landis, H. Z., Jr., 22 N. Century, Memphis, Tenn.
Lane, F. C, 2340 Buckingham Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Lawrence, .1. S., 350 S. Edgewood, La Grange, 111.
LeMaster, E. B., Jr., 381 Grandview St., Memphis, Tenn.
Livingston, R. E., Box 246, Sebring, Fla.
Lloyd, H. D., 310 Eunice Dr., Lakeland, Fla.
Lohman, W. J., Jr., 1632 Edgewood Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.
Love, Julian, 1610 Granville Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Lund, J. P., 3610 Kirby Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
McAlister, D. K., 19 Roosevelt Rd., Maplewood, N. J.
McCartv, D. S., Jr., 105 Grace St., Mount Airy, N. C.
McClure, R. C 423 N.E. 26th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
McCullough, D. L., Box 65, Lincolnton, N. C.
McDevitt, N. B., 315 W. University Dr., Chapel Hill, N. C.
McEachern, D. R., Jr., 2915 Hydranger PI., Wilmington, N. C.
McGirt, R. K., Red Springs, N. C.
McKeithen, A. W., 614 West End Blvd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
McLean, C. W., Jr., 1106 Summit Ave., Washington, N. C.
McNeill, J. L., Jr., 503 N. Fulton St., Raeford, N. C.
MacKav, A. F., P. O. Box 749, Ocala, Fla.
MacQueen, D. M., 214 Chestnut St., Clinton, N. C.
Manning, W. E., 902 Monroe St., Roanoke Rapids, N. C.
Martin, R. H., Lime Kiln Lane, Louisville, Ky.
Mauze, Madison, 111 Park Lane Dr., San Antonio, Texas.
Maxwell, T. M., Lake Talquin Rd., Quincy, Fla.
Mever, L. K., 1121 Monterey Blvd., St. Petersburg, Fla.
Miller, A. D., Ill, 345 21 Ave., N.E., St. Petersburg, Fla.
Miller, P. D., Jr., 1125 Virginia Ave., Norton, Va.
Moore, L. E., 701 Beaty St., Conway, S. C.
Moore, W. E., Rt. 1, Box 128, North Little Rock, Ark.
Morcock, S. J., Jr., Box 507, Covington, Ga.
Morris, F. H., Ill, Box 265, Kernersville, N. C.
Morrison, R. W., Jr., .3447 Coleman St., Columbia, S. C.
Mullen, D. E., 1935 Summerfield Rd., Winter Park, Fla.
Nash, D. W., 314 W. Markham, Little Rock, Ark.
Nickles, A. S., Jr., Box 483. Hodges, S. C.
Norris, F. P., II, Davidson, N. C.
Nye, F. L., 511 Laurel St., Conway, S. C.
Otten, W. H., Box 95, Derita, N. C.
Owen, K. D., 1201 E. Morehead, Charlotte. N. C.
Owens, J. T., Rt. 1, Box 4, Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Page, R. C, III, 1516 Princeton Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Pantigoso, E. J., Apartado 154, Arequipa, Peru.
Parker, C. M., 123 College Ave., LaGrange, Ga.
Pate, R. H., Jr., Stonewall Heights, Abingdon, Va.
Patterson, J. O., Jr., 524 Darwin Rd., Roanoke, Va.
Payne, P. W., 401 N. Kanawha St., Beckley, W. Va.
Pease, R. C, 603 Country Club Dr., Burlington, N. C.
Pitts, C. M., Jr., 727 Myrtle Dr., Rock Hill, S. C.
Pleasants, J. M., 160 N. Ridge St., Southern Pines, N. C.
Pless, K. L., 208 N. Ridge Ave., Kannapolis, N. C.
Poag, J. R., Ill, 2214 Lockhart Dr., Charlotte. N. C.
Porter, A. A., Jr., Rt. 2, Sharon Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Powell, H. D., 313 E. Cliff St., Wallace, N. C.
Powell. J. B., Box 306, Elon College, N. C.
Price, T. B., 1019 Jackson Ave., Florence, S. C.
Proctor, C. O., Jr.. Rt. 1, Ahoskie, N. C.
Puckett, S. C, 502 Lakewood Ave., Conway, S. C.
Quantz, N. G., Jr., 328 College Ave., Rock Hill, S. C.
Ramsey, H. E., 1300 W. Gannon Rd., N.W., Atlanta, Ga.
Ray, B. C, Jr., 1302 Fairview Dr., Moultrie, Ga.
Reynolds, J. H., Rutherfonlton, N. C.
Reynolds, W. L., 646 N.E. 19th Ave., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Page Two JlxDidred Forty
Sopho
mores
Khiime, I). W.. 2(i'.t Wiilmit St., Clinton. S. C.
Rhyne, C. N., Hox ITf). Ml. Holly. N. <'.
Kiih. V. I'".. Jr.. t; Woo.Uif.st Kd., A.shi'vilU-, N. C.
Kuhimls, Kif.li'iiik, 11. 125 Hioad St.. Chiirli'ston, S. C.
Kichiinis, \V. J.. Jr.. ;t8 Marsh St.. Conconl. N. C.
Richmond. (!. K.. -1201 Seciuoia Rd.. Coluniliia, S. C.
Ridenhour. T. K.. :i-2 White Lane. Concord. N C.
RiKK's. I.. \V.. 402.i l.ee St., Little Rock. Ark.
Robert.s. C. 1).. 111. liTlt I)arlin>rton Cir., Atlanta. Ca.
Robinson, I). W.. Jr., JlKiO Clareniont Dr.. Colunihia, S. C.
Rucker, R. W., 15:U) Overbrook Ave.. Winston-Saletn. N. C.
RuKifle-"'. A. ('.. 15;{.'! Fairidtre Dr.. Kinnsport. Tenn.
RumberKer. T. C. Jr.. 27 Fort Hunt Rd.. Alexan<iria, Va.
Sanford. L. C. Jr., 101 N. Main St., Mocksville. N. C.
Schauni. C. M.. Jr.. 74S l^aklawn .Ave.. Winston-Salem, N. C
Scheerer, W. D., 2l2;i Wallace Ave., Spartanburg, S. C.
Schillinjr, H. 1... I'ineviile. W. Va.
Scott. J. K., l(l.'!7 Wheatland Ave., Lancaster, Pa.
Shive, I'. A., c o Mr. T. K. Setser, Scotts, N. C.
Smith, C. t;.. tiiiO N. Laurel St., Valdese, N. C.
Smith. R. C Box .5877. Jacksonville 7. Fla.
Smith. T. K.. Jr.. Box .S(;3. Laurinburjr, N. C.
Spaunh, C. L., 7-15 .Arbor Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Spence, T. K.. Jr.. Rt. :{. LilliuKton, N. C.
Spivey. H. K., Box :W.\. Mt. (Jilead. N. C.
Sprajrins, J. F., 4UI Harrison St.. Batesville. .Ark.
Stanton. W. A.. III. Leland, Miss.
SUrlinir. J. P.. Hubert, N. C.
Stewart, K. L., Jr., 141 Tennessee St., Kinnspoit, Tenn.
Stone. J. C. 7U7 W. Lafayette, Marianna. Fla.
Street, K. R., 2101 Coniston PI., Charlotte, N. C.
Stuart, W. D.. HI. 450H W. Seminary, Richmond, Va.
Taylor, J. C, .320 Paseo Kncinal, San Antonio, Texas.
Thompson, W. A., 1029 E. ."J-Notch Ct., Andalusia, Ala.
Thrower, W. M., 1788 Olenview, .Memphis, Tenn.
Thurmaii, C. B., M5!» Hartford Ave.. Atlanta. Cu.
Van Sant. B. W., 805 S.K. 18th St., Ft. Lauderdale. Fla.
Verreault, J. A., Ill, Rt. 1, Box H>;, Valde.se, N. C.
Warden, D. R.. :J48 Union St., Bluefield, W. Va.
Warr, O. S., Ill, 1521 Central, Memphis, Tenn.
Watwood, J. L., Childersburjc, Ala.
Wearn, J. H., 1.500 Kxeter Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Welborn. W. J.. Jr.. 25<; Guernsey Rd., Trion, (Ja.
Wells, L. K., McConnells, S. C.
West, J. H., Box 72. Piedmont, Ala.
White, S. A., Jr., S. Fifth St. Extension, Mebane, N. C.
Whitesell, W. E.. Box tUiti. Galax. Va.
Whitley, D. P., i;22 4th St., N.E., Hickory, N. C.
Whitlow, J. W'., Mt. Mourne, N. C.
Wilkerson, F. C, 7,50 Myrtle Ave., Rock Hill, S. C.
Williams, S. J., Jr., Livingston, Ala.
Wilsev, J. D., Reynolda, N. C.
Wil.son, R. A., First St., Lowell, N. C.
Wilson, R. P., Box 20.3, Ridgeway, Va.
W'ritrht, T. P., Jr., 1123 Clement St., Radford, Va.
Zimmerman, S. R., Ill, 203 Byrd Blvd., Greenville, S. C.
Juniors
Aldridge, J. M., Jr., HOG LaFayette Ave., Rocky Mount, N. C.
Allen, W. L., Jr., Box 25. Rockingham. N. C.
Anderson. T. K.. 1831; Westover Ave., Petersburg, Va.
Anderson. V. T.. Jr.. 302 South St.. Union. S. C.
Andrews. P. N.. 207 Harper Dr.. Orange, Va.
Antley. R. M.. 130t; Whittaker, Columbia, S. C.
Atkinson, C. R., 144 Bruns Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Austell. E. C, 325 Mills Ave., Spartanburg, S. C.
Austin, R. E., 1814 E. 5th St., Ocala, Fla.
Balentine, J. D., IK! Williams St., Greenville, S. C.
Ballentine, K. W.. III. Ole Post Rd., Erwin, N. C.
Barbee, P. W., 803 E. Pritchard St., Asheboro. N. C.
Bennett. J. S.. Jr.. 3810 Tuckaseegee Rd.. Charlotte, N. C.
Benton, R. B., Kiit Romany Rd., Lexington, Ky.
Bernhardt, J. S., Jr., 5 Bernhardt Cir.. Lenoir. N. C.
Biggers. W. P.. 2153 Colonv Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Bishop, W. G., Jr., Box 287, Greenwood. S. C.
Bitter, K. F.. 1(52 Kimberlv Ave.. Asheville. N. C.
Boland. W. R., 813 Avenue"G. N.E.. Winter Haven, Fla.
Booth, P. E., Box 1178, Rocky Mount. X. C.
Brooks, E. B., Jr., 522 Stratford Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Bross, A. C, 1124 S. Main St., Greenwood, S. C.
Brown, E. M.. 81 Louise Ave., Concord, N. C.
Brown. H. H., Box 5(!, Davidson. N. C.
Brown, P. E., Jr., 338 S. Main St., Henderson, Ky.
Broyles. V. S., Ill, 38 The Prado N.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Brubaker, R. F., 259 Belvedere Dr.. Macon, Ga.
Burns, W. B., Jr., 2ti53 Brookdale Dr., Atlanta 5, Ga.
Byers, Bennie, Jr., Box 843, Davidson, N. C.
Byrd, D. R., Rt. 2, Box 32, Nonvood, K. C.
Caldwell, J. B. H., 532 Barberry Ln., Louisville, Kv.
Campbell, H. B., Jr., 1626 Queens Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Cenegy. V. C, (\G Dartmouth .\ve.. Avenel. N. J.
Chandler. A. J.. Rt. 2, Union Mills, X. C.
Chapman, C. B. M., 337 Maple Ave., Welch. W. Va.
Chastain. C. H.. P. O. Box 1112. Lakeland. Fla.
Clark. J. J.. Jr.. 1309 Providence Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Clarke. Samuel. Jr.. 1207 Westminster Dr., Columbia, S. C.
Cline. J. F., Jr., Stony Point. N. C.
Cole, J. R., Box 436, Xewnan, Ga.
Coleman, F. P., Jr., Rt. 1, Huntersville, N. C.
Cooke, C. L., Rt. 2, Box 251, Huntersville, N. C.
Couch, G. T., Xo. 8 X. "G" St., Pensacola, Fla.
Couch, W. W., Jr., 701 W^ Union St., Morganton, X. C.
Crawford, J. C, III, Box 106, Maryville, Tenn.
Currie, K. M., Jr., Box 243, Wallace, X. C.
Cutting, T. A., Jr., 5421 Free Ferry, Fort Smith, Ark.
Dabbs, J. M., Jr., Rt. 1, Mayesville, S. C.
Daniel, C. A., Box 136, Charlottesville, Va.
Davis, C. E., Jr., 426 Melbourne Court, Charlotte, X. C.
Deane, T. I., Jr.. Box 146. Safetv Harbor, Fla.
Denham, J. W., 814 E. Sprague St., Winston-Salem. N. C.
Dennis. H. B., Jr., 1728 Buena Vista Rd., Winston-Salem, X. C.
Dickson, C. B.. Box .595, Marion, X. C.
Dingier, T. W., 31 X.E. 43rd St., Miami, Fla.
Douglas, T. S., Ill, 742 Stratford Rd.. Winston-Salem, X. C.
Duncan. C. B., Jr.. 106 Pleasant St.. Spindale, X. C.
DuPuis, R. T., 211 Banbury Rd., Richmond, Va.
Edwards, E. S., Box 37, Spring Hope. X. C.
Edwards, W. G., Jr., 2714 Stratford Rd.. Columbia, S. C.
Ellis. J. A.. 311 Pleasant St.. Spindale. X. C.
Emmrich. M. W^, 3345 Willow Oak Rd., Charlotte, X. C.
Erckman, P. X., 1299 Moores Mill Rd., X.W., Atlanta, Ga.
Etchison, W. E., 1845 Delaney St., Orlando, Fla.
Ferguson, W. L., 11 Smith St., York, S. C.
Ferrell, R. W., Burton, Rt. 8, Kingsport, Tenn.
Francis, J. G. R., Apt. M-4 King Haigler Apts., Camden, S. C.
Frierson, P. K., 515 E. Brow Rd., Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
Garvin, D. W., 311 W. University Dr., Chapel Hill. X. C.
Gilbert. R. W.. Jr.. 669 Shades Crest Rd., Birmingham, Ala.
Goodson, W. B.. Rt., 3, Salem Church Rd., Lincolnton, X. C.
Gordon, R. A.. Jr., 212 W. 5th Ave., Gastonia, X. C.
Grey, W. R., Ill, 355 W. Kivett St., Asheboro, X. C.
Groome, R. T., 8 Woodley Ave., Asheville, X. C.
Harris. B. H., Jr., 200 W'oodlands, Mobile. Ala.
Henderson, G. P., Jr., Maxton, N. C.
Herlong, J. H., 620 Herlong Ave., Rock Hill, S. C.
Page Tiro Hundred Forty-one
Juniors
Hill, T. M., Jr., 1715 Plaza, Charlotte, N. C.
Hoagland, R. D., 509 Wickershani Ave., Ft. Benning, Ga.
Hodel, R. E., 137 Westover Dr., Elkin, N. C.
Hollingsworth, D. M., 504 Pecan Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Hollister, C. G., Box 1107, New Bern, N. C.
Holmes, J. E., Jr., 3854 Central Ave., Memphis, Tenn.
Holt, F. S., Jr., 1110 Edgewood Ave., Burlington, N. C.
Huffaker, R. A., 2137 Briarwood Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Huggins, C. P., Jr., Box 443, Kingstree, S. C.
Hull, W. M., Jr., 640 E. Main St., Rock Hill, S. C.
Huntley, W. M., 1463 Carolyn Dr., Charlotte, N. C.
James, C. M., 124 S. 1st St., Albemarle, N. C.
Jefferson, Thomas, III, 3316 Loxley Rd., Richmond, Va.
Johnson, A. T., Jr., 505 Parrish Dr., Benson, N. C.
Johnson, H. P., Davidson, N. C.
Johnston, J. S., 1333 Providence Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Jones, M. C, 41 Orange Ave., Rockledge, Fla.
Jones, P. B., 301 N. Central Ave., Belmont, N. C.
Kelly, T. E., 1105 9th Ave., Conway, S. C.
Kernan, T. E., 1024 Fourquerean Ln., Richmond, Va.
Kimball, M. P., Jr., 1124 Guernsey, Orlando, Fla.
Kimbirl, J. E., 2820 Sunset Dr., Chailotte, N. C.
King, L. R., 701 Sunset Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
King, R. R. H., 2408 Fairview Rd., Raleigh, N. C.
Kistler, H. L., Rt. 1, Mooiesvile, N. C.
Kottmeier, C. A., 333 N. Ivanhoe Blvd., Orlando, Fla.
Kuykendall, J. W., Nations Ford Rd., Rt. 2. Charlotte, N. C.
Kwon, B. K., 162 Sang Dong, Taegu, Korea.
Lamm, D. B., 121 North Ave., Wilson, N. C.
Landis, F. C, Rock Ledge Farm, Rt. 2, Front Royal, Va.
Lathan, S. R., Jr., 134 West End, Chester, S. C.
Lawing, K. L., 1008 14th St., Hartsville, S. C.
Lawrence, A. P., 175 Spooks Branch Rd., Asheville, N. C.
Lewis, E. L., Jr., 205 South St., Greensboro, Ga.
Lide, V. D., 10 Forest View Dr., Greenville, S. C.
Loftin, C. L, in, Box 1053, Gastonia, N. C.
Long, D. E., 3807 Kensington, Tampa 9, Fla.
Long, E. M., II, 1049 W. Front St., Burlington, N. C.
McBryde, A. M., Jr., 410 Forest Hills Blvd. E., Durham, N. C.
McCaskill, D. W., 2316 N. Poplar St., Charlotte, N. C.
McCutchen, T. M., Jr., Rt. 2, Florence, S. C.
McGehee, C. J., 2124 Lombardy Cir., Charlotte, N. C.
McGuirt, S. H., Jr., Rt. 5, Forest Hills, Monroe, N. C.
McRae, O. J.. Jr., Rt. 2, Laurinburg, N. C.
Massey, C. D., Box 218, Waxhaw, N. C.
Mayfield, L. M., 203 4th Ave. S.E., Cairo, Ga.
Milner, J. 0., 58 Sheridan Dr., Atlanta, Ga.
Milstead, J. W., Jr., 317 Ann St., Rockingham, N. C.
Mintz, C. S., Jr., 813 Woodburn Rd., Raleigh, N. C.
Mitchem, W. S., Milton, Fla.
Moore, J. H., 510 Oakland Ave., Rock Hill, S. C.
Morrisett, P. E., Box 282, Boiling Springs, N. C.
Morrison, A. T. J., 1610 Home Ave,, Hartsville, S. C.
Murray, E. N., Jr., 7033 Strathmore St., Chevy Chase, Md.
Neubauer, J. D., Ill, 3919 Brookfield, Louisville, Ky.
Neville, W. G., Jr., 14 Chatham Rd. N.W., Atlanta, Ga.
Nix, J. A., Box 642, Tucker, Ga.
Noi-vell, J. T., Jr., Box 267, Morganton, N. C.
O'Briant, W. H., 51 N. Church St., Concord, N. C.
Overall, J. C, Jr., 1135 Gateway Ln., Nashville, Tenn.
Padgett, W. N., Jr., Box 641, Marion, S. C.
Parks, S. V., 512 Sullivan Rd., Statesville, N. C.
Patton, W. L., Jr., 615 N. Washington, Brownsville, Tenn.
Pearsall, D. M., 620 Llewellyn PI., Charlotte, N. C.
Persinger, H. M., Jr., Box 284, Williamson, W. Va.
Peters, J. S., 2806 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va.
Pickard, C. O., Jr., 560 Pine Crest Rd., Macon, Ga.
Pinkney, J. F., Jr., No. 1 Edgehill Dr., Bellehaven, Alexandria,
Va.
Plyler, S. A., 611 Mocksville Ave., Salisbury, N. C.
Poindexter, J. S., Ill, 625 E. 45th St., Savannah, Ga.
Poulson, J. T., 1072 Lyndhurst Rd., Waynesboro, Va.
Purks, W. K., Jr., 1400 Baum St., Vicksburg, Miss.
Ramsey, G. W., 540 Cloverhurst, Athens, Ga.
Reagan, C. H., 408 N. Nansemond St., Apt. 2, Richmond, Va.
Redding, W. A., 136 N. High St., Asheboro, N. C.
Reddoch, A. L., 62 Fontainebleau Dr., New Orleans, La.
Reed, C. M., Jr., Box 345, Waynesville, N. C.
Reid, B. J., 4609 Gen. Pershing Dr., Charlotte, N. C.
Reid, C. G., Jr., 1225 E. Morehead St.. Charlotte, N. C.
Reid, J. W., Jr., 101 Reid St., Thomasville, Ga.
Renfro, J. F., Jr., 862 Glendalyn Ave., Spartanburg, S. C.
Reuter, D. B., 916 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111.
Rieger, R. W.. Jr., 138 Lausanne Dr., Camden, S. C.
Robinson, B. S., Rt. 3, Gastonia, N. C.
Rudisill, D. P., Jr., 431 4th St., N.E., Hickory, N. C.
Rutherford, C. L., Jr., 1263 Selma St., Mobile, Ala.
Samuels, H. M., 118 Pinckney St., Chester, S. C.
Scott, Walter, III, 3428 Seward PI., Charlotte, N. C.
Seawell, M. B., Jr., 206 E. 20th St., Lumberton, N. C.
Shaw, H. L., Ill, 4 Concord Ave., Larchmont, N. Y.
Shoffner, R. M., 3101 Darrien Dr., Raleigh, N. C.
Shore, B. J., Ill, 307 Park St., Bristol, Va.
Sloan, S. R., 509 W. 5th Ave., Gastonia, N. C.
Smith, H. H., 1727 Brandon Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Smith, S. W., Jr., 1629 Hertford Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Smyth, J. A., Box 144, Blacksburg, Va.
Snelson, Alonzo, II, 218 Graham St., Elkins, W. Va.
Spangler, R. V., Jr., 2700 Selwyn Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Stafford, J. S., Jr., 407 Ferncliff Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
St. Clair, J. T., Jr., 5005 Staunton Ave., Charleston, W. Va.
Steele, J. L., Barium Springs, N. C.
Stein, D. U., 7015 Alpine St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Sterling, P. V. O., 6 South Lane, Hingham, Mass.
Stevens, E. I., 515 Euclid Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
Stewart, D. W., 1621 Beverly Dr., Charlotte, N. C.
Streetman, F. W., Jr., Box 774, Hendersonville, N. C.
Sutcliffe, G. H., Sharon View Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
Swaim, C. G., Jr., 15 Hege Dr., Lexington, N. C.
Tankersley, M. H., 1632 South Court St., Montgomery, Ala.
Taylor, L. R., 209 N. 13th St., Wilmington, N. C.
Taylor, W. L., Jr., 47th St. Ext., Virginia Beach, Va.
Terrell, W. P., Rt. 3, Box 46, College Park, Ga.
Toumaras, J. L., 108 Brooks St., Burlington, N. C.
Triplette, R. R., Jr., 331 Church St., Elkin, N. C.
Voight, W. L., 1611 Independence Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Walker, W. L., Ill, Cedar Spring, Spartanburg, S. C.
Wall, E. C, Jr., 1607 9th Ave., Conway, S. C.
Walter, L. E., 334 South Wall, Calhoun, Ga.
Welsh, J. A., Ill, Box 597, Chesterfield, S. C.
Wester, W. H., 169 Young Ave., Henderson, N. C.
Westervelt, H. A., 400 W. Lake Dr., Athens, Ga.
Wilder, W. B., 201 Delee Dr., Kingsport, Tenn.
Wilkinson, W. E., 5th St. Ext., Mebane, N. C.
Williams, J. J., Box 246, Yadkinville, N. C.
Wilson, E. E., Jr., 3626 Commonwealth .-^ve., Charlotte, N. C.
Wilson, R. S., 821 N. Madison, El Dorado, Ark.
Womble, W. W., Carbonton Rd., Sanford, N. C.
Woodmansee, R. S., 9 Virginia Ln., Little Rock, Ark.
Woods, C. A., 200 W. Avondale Rd., Greensboro, N. C.
Wynne, R. W., Ill, 1716 Canterbury Rd., Raleigh, N. C.
Yarboro, F. C, Rt. 2, Box 126-B, Elkin, N. C.
Yarbrough, J. E., Jr., 2032 Sussex Ln., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Zemp, F. L., 203 Laurens St., Camden, S. C.
Page Two Hundred Forty-two
Seniors
Adkin.s. J. K.. Jr.. 514 Buult-vitnl Kd.. Suiiitfr, S. C.
Armfield. K. F.. .'MO I'lub I'luk Kil.. Win.tton-SuU-m, N. C.
Baker. R. K.. MlOf. I'ornwiill K«l., Durham. N. C.
Bassptt. K. N., Kt. 1, Fort Vallov. Ca.
Bates. K. A.. Bux SIS. Wayiioss, Ca.
Beikhiim, D. K.. Jr.. Kt. 1. Wiim.shuru. .S. C.
Bfllaniy. H. V., Jr.. Box lif..'!. Myrtle Beach. S. C.
Bernhardt, J. C. Jr.. .il'.'i Woodsi.le I'l.. Lenoir. N. ('.
Bondurant, W. I... tU4 N. Stratford Rd.. Winston-Salem, N. C.
Boyie. J. C. S-JoO .'^ardis Rd., Charlotte 7. N. ('.
Bradford. I). S., :U0 folville Kd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Bridtrman. S. C... Box Ii;!>. MeClellanville, S. C.
Bright. K. C. 1101 Virginia St.. (Weenshoro, N. C.
Bryan, C. M., 112 Faireloth St.. RaleiKh, N. C.
Buckley, G. D.. 3010 San Miquel. Tampa, Fla.
Campbell. J. \V., 108 I'rovidenoe Kd., Charlotte. N. C.
Carmichael, 1). M., 2.'Ut; Saratoga Dr., Louisville 5. Kv.
Carpenter, K. \V., Ill, .'(07 \V. Cambridge, (neenwood. S. C.
Carter. C. K.. Box ,M7, Mt. Airy. X. C.
Carter, L. Y.. Kt. 1, Indian Springs. Teiin.
Chapin. L. W., Jr., 248 Camden Rd. N.K., Atlanta, Ga.
Coleman, \V. J.. Davidson. N. C.
Colston, W. ("., IfiO.J Pinecrest Rd., Rocky Mount, N. C.
Copeland. D. L.. Box :}(>2. Davidson, N. C.
Cox, S. C, Jr., Box 72. Waynesboro, Ga.
Craijf. H. B.. Jr.. :)4 Franklin Ave., Concord, N. C.
Craijr, R. R.. Jr.. Rt. 3, Gastonia, N. C.
Crittenden, R. H., 1537 Caswell St., RaleiKh, N. C.
CumminK'. F. P., 824 Sutton Hill Rd.. Nashville, Tenn.
Cumminii:. R. E.. 1232 E. 5th St., Ocala, Fla.
Daniel. E. R.. 4825 Brook Rd., Richmond. Va.
Davis, C. E., 1682 'j (Uh Ave.. HuntinRton, W. Va.
Davis, C. G., Jr.. .VJ Sunset Pkwy.. Asheville, N. C.
Davis. H. R.. 534 E. 49th St.. Savannah. Ga.
Dickson. C. D.. Box 233. Shelby. N. C.
DillinRham. R. H.. Jr.. 318 Elm St.. Lancaster, S. C.
Drummond, C. S., Jr., 21»28 Windsor Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Eller, J. J., 312 Warren St., Greensboro. N. C.
Emerson, F. C, Moylan, Pa.
Fagg, D. J.. 514 E. Lexington Ave., Guilford, N. C.
Faggart, P. M., Jr., 25 Georgia Ave.. Concord, N. C.
Farley. B. W.. Rt. 1. Box 342, Hollins. Va.
Feezor. C. N.. Jr., t! Pine Tree Rd.. Salisbury, N. C.
Felker. R. W.. Rt. 8, Box 970, Concord, N. C.
Ferguson, H. M., Jr., 11 Smith St., York, S. C.
Fisher, G. W.. 207 Bertie Dr.. Raleigh, N. C.
Flovd. G. C. 205 S. Laurel Ave.. Charlotte. N. C.
Forester. K. P.. Jr.. 430 W. Calhoun St.. Sumter, S. C.
Fraley, W. B., 314 Marion Ave., Gaffney, S. C.
Fry, E. A., Rt. 1, Guilford College, N. C.
Frye, J. H., Ill, 210 Outer Dr., Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Gardner. J. A.. Rt. 2. Salem. Va.
Gilmer. G. H.. Hampden-Sydney. Va.
Graniley, D. I.. Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Greene, J. H.. BIO Colville Rd.. Charlotte. N. C.
Griffin. H. C. Box 237. Davidson. N. C.
Grossman. G. D.. 2305 Mercer Cir.. Jacksonville. Fla.
Haigh. C. T., Jr., 118 Dobbin Ave., Fayetteville, N. C.
Hambright, J. B., 527 Circle Dr., Burlington, N. C.
Hamer. B. M., Jr.. Hamer, S. C.
Hand. W. I... 3427 Oak St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Harris. W. B.. 1(511 Warfield Dr., Ocala, Fla.
Hedgpeth, E. M., Jr., Box 87. Chapel Hill, N. C.
Helms, C. G.. 2915 Boulevard Dr. S.E.. Atlanta. Ga.
Hemingway, G. C, Jr., 2243 Elizabeth Ave., Winston-Salem.
N. C.
Hoagland, H. C, 7729 Stuart Hall Rd., Richmond, Va.
Hollingsworth, J. H., 3124 Avenham Ave., Roanoke. Va.
Hopper, C. W.. Jr., 709 Academv Ave.. Wavnesboro. Ga.
Howard. A. L., 104 Ellison Dr., Lenoir, X. C.
Howerton. P. F., Jr., Rt. 1, Matthews, X. C.
Huntley. W. T., Ill, 475 E. Massachusetts Ave.. Southern
Pines. X. C.
Huskins, H. J.. 1032 Ridge Ave., Gastonia. N. C.
Irvin, E. 1,., S31 Arbor Rd., WinHton-.Saleni. N. C.
John.son, J. R., til9 W. Main St., Morrixlown, Tenn.
Johnston, R. .M.. III. Box 109S. (iastonia, .\. C.
Jones, J. A., Ill, 3503 Seminary Ave., Richmond, Va.
Jones, R. G., 7420 Muirfield Rd., Norfolk, Va.
Kemmerer, G. V., Jr.. 2213 Airacobra St.. Brintol, Pa.
Keown, R. ('., 1009 Avenue A, Rome, (la.
Kestler, W. E.. Jr.. 127 S. Spring St., Concord, N. C.
Kibrough. J. T., Jr., Davidson, N. C.
Lake, J. G.. 1848 Virginia Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Lampley. C. G.. III. Box fi4. Shelby. N. C.
Lanford, R. V., 5ir, X. Main St.. Woodruff, S. C.
Lewis, (i. X.. 939 Sherwood Lane. .StJitesville. N. C.
Lewis. P. A., 913 Edith St., Durham, N. C.
Lipe, J. P., Box 23, Davidson, X. C.
Loftin. C. W.. Box 44. Weaverville. N. C.
Long, W. B.. Jr.. 211 Pine Forest Dr., Greenville, S. C.
Lucas. J. B.. 20r> Cross St., Sanford, X. C.
Lupberger, E. A., 1729 Sylvan Rd. S.W., Atlanta, Ga.
Lynn, A. S., Jr., 921 E. Main St., Albemarle, N. C.
McCormick, D. C, St. Pauls, X. C.
McGowan, C. E., Rt. 2, Box .502, Greenville, X. C.
McKinnon, Graham, III, Box 1083, Port Lavaca, Texas.
McLain, D. P., Jr.. 36 Tallulah Ave.. Jacksonville. Fla.
McLean. A. D.. Box 8, Aberdeen. .X. C.
McVav, J. H., 304 Grand Ave.. Front Royal, Va.
MacRae, R. A.. Box 247. Mt. Gilead, X. C.
Mackorell. J. ('., Jr., Box 180, Morganton, N. C.
Malinoski, J. C, Jr.. ()02 W. Minne.sota Ave., DeLand, Fla.
Martin, J. M., Box 4f)(i, Davidson, X. C.
Mason, E. E., Jr.. 1525 E. Lakeview. Pensacola, Fla.
Maynard, J. G., Jr.. 110 Christian St.. Cheraw, S. C.
Miller, W. X., 3405 Benard Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Misle, H. A., 2119 Malvern Rd., Charlotte. N. C.
Moore, C. A., Rt. 2. Raleigh, X. C.
Moore, E. L.. 301 Kensington .■\ve.. Xorth Wilkesboro, N. C.
Moore. L. W., Rt. 2, Box 251, Lake City, S. C.
Morgan. C. V.. Jr.. 707 Mountain V'iew Cir., Johnson City,
Tenn.
Morgan, E. H., 489 Connecticut Ave., Spartanburg, S. C.
Morgan, J. G., Spring Hope, X. C.
Morris, C. B., Jr., 3311 Clark Ave., Raleigh. X. C.
Morris, J. C, III, Rt. 1. Box 122. Anchorage, Ky.
Nash, S. D., St. Pauls, N. C.
Neale, S. P., 124 Baltic Cir., Tampa, Fla.
Oliver. R. P.. Jr., Box 378, Matthews, N. C.
Page, D. C. 520 Ridge St., Southern Pines, N. C.
Palmer, D. W., II, Rt. 5. Raleigh, X. C.
Paschall. H. 0., 913 S. Evers St., Plant City, Fla.
Patterson, J. A.. Box 917, Shelby. X. C.
Patterson. S. C. Box 483. Cramerton, X. C.
Patton. W. C, 731 E. Kingston Ave., Charlotte 3, N. C.
Payne, E. M., III. 401 X. Kanawha. Beckley, W. Va.
Pomeroy, W. L., Jr., 1421 St. Mary's Dr., Waycross, Ga.
Powell, R. E., 4420 Signal Hill Rd., Louisville, Ky.
Price, W. F., 1002 Brook St., Fayetteville, N. C.
Ramm, P. H., 714 Oaklawn. Winston-Salem, X. C.
Regen, B. B., 2.503 Fairfax Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
Ritchie, B. M., 321 Avcock St., Concord, X. C.
Rogers, H. W., Jr., 591 X. Main St.. Mooresville. N. C.
Roper, D. F.. 20f, Greve Rd.. Pensacola. Fla.
Rourk, M. H., Jr., Box 628, Shallotte, X. C.
Russell, F. W., II, Rt. 1, Lime Kiln Ln., Louisville, Ky.
Sasser, M. C, 1401 9th Ave., Conway. S. C.
Sayers. R. E., 1805 Ohio St., Bluefield, W. Va.
Sell. J. H.. Jr., 307 Sunset Dr.. Monroe. N. C.
Setzler. R. C. Jr.. 312 X. 5th St.. Albemarle. N. C.
Shaw. J. G.. Rt. 4. Box 140. Fayetteville, X. C.
Shiplev, W. B.. 16 W. Avon Pkwy., Asheville, N. C.
Sloan, R. D., 1515 Stanford PI., Charlotte. X. C.
Page Two Hundred Forty-three
Seniors
Smith, 0. F., 813 Juniper Dr., Fayetteville, N. C.
Smith, R. M., Jr., 410 S. Main St., Mt. Airy, N. C.
Smith, W. G., Jr., 611 W. Pearsall St., Dunn, N. C.
Smyth, R. J., 2100 Roswell Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Spears, L. P., Ill, 420 Country Ln., Louisville, Ky.
Stancil, R. L., Davidson, N. C.
Stewart, E. T., 531 W. Jewel, Kirkwood 22, Mo.
Stowe, C. T., Jr., 304 Central Ave., Belmont, N. C.
Taylor, R. B., Jr., 800 Nottingham Dr., Greensboro, N. C.
Teachey, W. T., Jr., 6000 Rois Rd., Richmond, Va.
Tedford, W. H., Jr., 1604 Parkview Court, Newberry, S. C.
Thomas, O. B., 131 N. Mulberry, Statesville, N. C.
Thomas, W. L., 2216 Creston Rd., Raleigh, N. C.
Thompson, W. E., 119 First St., Spencer, N. C.
Thrailkill, T. F., 3320 Sims St., Hapeville, Ga.
Trask, J. M., Jr., Beaufort, S. C.
Traviss, J. J., Box 957, Winter Haven, Fla.
Tripp, C. H., Jr., Rt. 2, Piedmont, S. C.
Turner, W. R., Jr., 303 Calvert Ave., Clinton, S. C.
Urwick, G. W., Jr., 2434 Forest Dr., Charlotte, N. C.
Wallace, S. W., 153 W. Wanola, Kingsport, Tenn.
Wang, Alfred, Missionary Research Library, c/o Union Theo-
logical Seminary, New York, N. Y.
Warlick, W. L., 216 N. St. Marks, Chattanooga, Tenn.
Watts, G. G., Jr., Box 193, Gaffney, S. C.
Weller, J. W., 2300 Greenway Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Wells, H. A., Ill Oak St., Chester, S. C.
West, J. H., Jr., 128 Milford Dr., Salisbury, N. C.
Williford, J. V., Richlands, Va.
Wilson, B. E., Jr., 203 W. James St., Mt. Olive, N. C.
Wilson, G. L., 233 Oakwood Dr., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Wolfe, W. W., Box 2025, Gainesville, Fla.
Wood, D. E., 305 6th St., Waynesboro, Ga.
Wood, L T., Ill, Box 987, Marion, S. C.
Woodward, P. M., Box 267, Quincy, Fla.
Wool, J. C, III, 916 Dunlap, Guntersville, Ala.
Wooten, R. N., Jr., Rt. 3, Olive Branch Rd., Monroe, N. C.
Zeh, J. H., Box 5133, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Special Students
Huffaker, J. W., Jr., Box 1156, Davidson, N. C.
Johnson, J. L., Rt. 9, Possum Walk Rd., Charlotte, N. C.
McLane, S. B., Jr., Davidson, N. C.
Park, N. Y., Druid Hills Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, Ga.
Plummer, R. J., Rt. 6, Charlotte, N. C.
Sparrman, C. A., Burtrask, Sweden.
Warren, W. I., Municipal Airport Branch, Charlotte, N. C.
Puge Two Hundred Forty-foiiT